copyright 2003 Alan Radding, all rights reserved
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If
I lift my eyes away from David’s bandaged face, away from the tubes
going into his nose and the wires attached to the monitors and the bags
dripping fluids down into his arm I can see out the
window to the Mediterranean Sea. Palm trees frame the view of bright blue ocean
and deep, clear blue sky, both so blue and bright you can barely tell one from
the other. I can’t see the actual beach, but I know it is there, a gleaming
ivory sandy strip of pristine sand.
David
and I were lying on that beach yesterday, at least I think it was yesterday. I
was modeling a bikini he had bought for me from Victoria’s Secret as a
honeymoon present. He was nearly panting with excitement when he saw me in it.
I felt awesome. Although
I enjoyed his excitement, I felt more exposed than I like in public so I worewore
a long white gauzy blouse as a cover up most of the time. Was he disappointed?
I’m not sure; he
didn’t say
anything at least., but I hope not.
We
have been married for what, four days now, maybe five? I’ve lost count. I don’t
know today’s date. I couldn’t tell you the time of day except that the sun is
high in the sky. David and I came here, to Israel, for our honeymoon. We were
married last Saturday night. I’d known David since I was a child, but I only
realized how much I loved him and wanted him in the last year or so.
This
past year, smothered in his love, has been the best year of my life. He’s
wanted me for longer than that, but I spent a lot of time holding him at arm’s
length, not letting him get too close. I’m not sure why, and already I feel the
regret surging through me. How many more delicious years like this past year
would we both have had if I hadn’t been so stubborn and foolish? If David
doesn’t pull through my remorse over this alone will kill me. And he might not
pull through; the doctors won’t give me any odds. All they say is
that they are doing everything they can, and I don’t doubt it. I
pray it is enough.
I won’t even get into the guilt I will feel if he dies. We were safely in our hotel, making love and then resting. I remembered I had run out of sunscreen earlier. David, who doesn’t rest for long under any circumstances, jumped up and announced he would go to what looked like a pharmacy across the street from the hotel and buy some more. He also wanted to get more film. “To take private pictures of you in your new bathing suit,” he said with an impish, mischievous grin as he left the room.
Five
minutes, maybe ten minutes later I heard a huge explosion. Even the hotel
seemed to shudder. At first, I couldn’t think what it might be. Work at a
construction site maybe? Moments later I heard the sirens of the emergency
vehicles. Then I realized. Instantly I leaped up and pulled on the clothes I’m still wearing
right now, pulled them on as fast as I could and dashed downstairs. I didn’t
wait for the elevator; I just ran down the stairs taking them two or three at a
time.
The
hotel’s big glass front windows were shattered. You could see mayhem in the
street. Bodies and parts of bodies and blood and pieces of metal and glass were
everywhere. And
then I heard theAnd hear the screams and awful
terrified wailing. Police and emergency personnel already were
dashing back and forth. Hotel security guards tried to keep us inside the
lobby, away from where the door and windows had been.
“My
husband is out there!” I screamed and frantically pushed past the guards. They couldn’t stop
me. Out on the street I couldn’t tell one person from the next. Everyone
looked bloody and dirty and tattered and burned. Then I saw David on the
opposite curb. They were already putting him on a stretcher. His beautiful
curly brown hair was
matted with blood and I don’t know what else. His new designer
eyeglasses, a recent gift from me, lay twisted and shattered on the pavement.
He had been walking out of the store as the bus drove by. It had just passed
him when a suicide bomber aboard the bus exploded his murderous packagesatchel.
I
don’t remember the hours that followed. Somehow I managed to call my parents
and David’s. They are flying over here, but I don’t even know when they will arrive.
And I don’t much care; there is nothing any of them can do to help David. “Pray
to God,” I told them. David used to pray; he actually likes going to synagogue.
I never used to pray much. I don’t think I’ve stopped praying since I saw David
lying bloody on the street.
When
I’m not praying, I sit here holding David’s hand and think. And do you know
what I think about? I think about dating. I think about all the stupid guys I
dated when I didn’t date David, all the years I spent going out with guys who
really meant nothing to me when the one guy who means everything was there and
willing and I knew it but wouldn’t admit it.
I
never considered myself very attractive. My earliest memories are of my father,
a doctor, kissing me on the head and murmuring that I was his smart exotic
beauty. He has always done this, since I was a little child. He did it just a
few days ago, before he walked me down the aisle at my wedding. “You are my
smart, exotic beauty; I love you more than you can ever know,” he whispered. My
younger sister is a striking blond with blue eyes and lips that are naturally
deep red. He calls her his shana punim,
Yiddish for a pretty face.
I’m
definitely not a pretty face. I have long, jet-black hair and thick black
eyebrows that I can barely manage to keep from joining into a single long
eyebrow like some sort of broad black marker line drawnserpentine
wall above my eyes. My eyes are large and dark brown, almost
black, with long lashes, and my complexion is dark. I seem tomust
have inherited my mother’s Sephardic coloring and my father’s lumpy Ashkenazic
nose. I learned how to use makeup and a little eyebrow plucking in high school
to make the most of what God gave me and discovered that many men find me
strangely alluring.
In
college, one French exchange student I dated for a while kept whispering that I
was his dark Jewess when we made love and how much my exotic looksI
turned him on,
not to mention my big boobs or long legs. At first I thought the Jewess
thing was so sophisticated in a retro kind of way, so European. It should have
tipped me off. Anyway, he’s the one I lost my virginity for. Can you believe
it? What a waste. It took a few months for his veneer of French glamour to wear
off.
After
the glamour fell
awaywore off all that was left was a
self-centered, self-important condescending, petulant schmuck and a closet
anti-Semite too. That came out at the very end. He had made some vicious, nasty
anti-Semitic remarks about a study
group leader in an economics class we both were taking. The kid was just another student, a
smart Jewish guy who admittedly wasn’t very cool but at least could explain the
stuff coherently, better than the professor in some ways. When I defended the
guy and said I was offended by his utterly uncalled for remarks, my so-called boyfriendhe
snarled under his breath, “fuckin’ Jews, you all stick together.”
“What
did you say?” I asked, not wanting to believe what I heard, not wanting to
believe any of it.
“Nothing,
it was nothing,” he mumbled.
What
a weasel, what a coward and a creep, I thought. That’s when I decided to end
the relationship. A few days later, just before my French Lit class, I told him
it was over. That brought on another onslaught of anti-Semitic invectives. But
before it all came to its sudden end he had taken me to some pretty wild
Euro-trash parties where he could show off his dark Jewess with a hot body.
I
guess David was the first man -- other than my father, who is completely
biased -- to find me
alluring, but I certainly didn’t appreciate it at the time. For a really dumb
USY Purim dance when
I was in middle school they ranpromoted
this really stupid Queen Esther contest, which all the girls treated as a big
joke. I didn’t actually participate much in USY stuff -- USY stands for United Synagogue
Youth, the youth group affiliated with our synagogue, but it is pretty much the same as B’nai B’rith Youth Organization or Young Judea or any of the ton of
Jewish youth groups -- , but for
some reason I took
part indid
this event. I
don’t remember why, maybe my parents made meone. All
of us went out of our way to put together the stupidest Queen Esther outfits
and then we paraded around in them. David, a thin, nerdy kid who still wore
glasses that curved around the backs of his ears, was an officer of the USY
group, probably because he was one of the few kids who actually took it
seriously.
Well,
David came up to me after the Esther parade and told me I was the most
beautiful Esther of the bunch, prettier even than Rebecca Schwartz, who was the
reigning super model of our bar/bat mitzvah class. At first I thought he was
joking, then I realized he was serious, then I thought I should be insulted
because the whole idea was to try to NOT be beautiful. And then I concluded
that he was just a fucked up dork who could easily be ignored.
David
went to nursery school with me at our synagogue so that must be where we first
met, but I don’t remember him from there. Over the last year we’ve looked at
old photos each of our parents have saved. Sometimes we’re both in the same
nursery school photos, but we’re never together. My best friend in nursery
school was a boy named Adam. He lived next door and we played together a lot.
He moved away when I was in the third grade, and I’ve never heard a word about
him since. David doesn’t remember Adam at all.
I
went to public school. My parents were obsessed that I only date Jewish
boys only. But then they go and send me to
public school. Who did they think I would meet? Either they had some liberal
Jewish public school egalitarian thing or they were just too cheap to send me
to private Jewish
day school. I could never decide which, but I was glad; I didn’t want to
go to Jewish day school. TSure, there
wasere
a huge number of Jewish kids in our public school, but I managed to be friends
mainly with the non-Jewish kids. For a long time my best friend was Christine,
whose family belonged to some fundamentalist Christian group.
Christine’s
parents made her go to church every Sunday and sit through long boring services
and sermons. My parents made me go to synagogue almost every Shabbat. So we
became close friends, joined initially in our hatred of going to religious
services on weekends. She also liked hanging around at our house because my
parents were a lot more relaxed about things like watching TV and listening to
pop music -- stuff her
parents thought would lead right to the devil. But her parents liked me, even
though I was corrupting their daughter. I think they saw Jews as a big
milestone on the way to the next coming of Jesus. My parents liked Christine
because when we got to high school she dated Jewish guys. They must have
thought it would rub off on me.
It’s
not that I wouldn’t date Jewish guys. The truth was that not many of them asked
me out. I was a jock in high school and played varsity soccer and basketball. I
hung out with the jock crowd, which was not very Jewish at my school. In fact,
my parents had a real thing about Friday night basketball games and lodged a big complaintmade
a big stink that went all the way to the school committee. It
actually was pretty embarrassing. I wanted my father to just drop it, but he
didn’t.
You
see if you were on a team you had to be at every game. If you missed too many
games you were kicked off the team. My father wanted me home for Shabbat dinner
on Friday night. My family made a big deal about Shabbat dinner. My father
would go to services, and we’d all have this big dinner when he got home.
Finally there was an accommodation with the school; some Friday night games
were shifted to other days and team members could miss games for religious
reasons without it counting against them.
My
parents still make a big deal with Friday night dinner. In the last year David
and I would spend
some Friday nights with my parents. Actually I love Friday night Shabbat dinner
now, especially when somebody else is cooking, but I hated it then.
This
Friday night thing really cramped my social life in high school. After the
games all the kids would go out to a burger or
pizza joint and then there would be parties. Friday night was the big high
school date night in our town. I argued with my parents about this constantly.
My sister, who was younger, backed me up. She was hoping I would set some kind
of precedent for her. My mother, who under her maiden name wriotes books about
women and Judaism, might waver, but my father wouldn’t budge. At least they
held some school dances on Saturday night when I could go.
So
at one point I was sort of going with a guy named Lawrence Jones, a forward on the boy’s
basketball team. He was black but if you heard him talking to anybody but his
black buddies, he didn’t speak like a black dude. He was tall and his body had
these long, smooth rippling muscles. I would touch his skin and think it felt
like the smoothest black velvet. I longed to wrap myself in it. He also was
pretty smart and had great taste in music and could talk about things other
than sports and cars, things like politics.
Even
the supposedly nice, smart Jewish guys I knew in high school had trouble
getting beyond sports and cars. Lawrence was the only guy I knew of in high
school who could talk about politics and not sound stupid. He should have been
on the debating team. My father might even have liked talking with him about
the battle with the school committee over Friday night sportssports team attendance,
but that was a thought I wouldn’t dare go anywhere near.
We
got together mainly by meeting at school dances. We clutched each other and danced slow grinding
regardless what music they were playing. Hey, it was a high school
romance. He’d throw his arm around me in the school hallway. We’d go out for pizzaburgers
after basketball games and he’d always have me home before my curfew. My
parents knew I was seeing one particular guy. Since we never really went on an
official date, I never had to confront them with it. So it was like
don’t-ask-don’t- tell.
All they wanted to know was where I would be and when I would be home. And
because we weren’t actually dating he didn’t even have to pick me up at home,
so he never met my parents.
My parents are very liberal,,
really typical
liberal Jews. They’re all for gays, they’re all for blacks. They just don’t
want any blacks or lesbians dating their princessesdaughters.
Then
Lawrence invited me to go with him to his sister’s engagement party. It sounded
like it was going to be a way cool party. It was on a Friday night in the
spring, after the basketball season. I asked my father if I could go just this
once. The party wouldn’t even start until 9 pm. “I will still be home for
kiddush and for dinner,” I pleaded.
“Who
is this boy?” my father asked.
“Lawrence
Jones. He’s in my AP history class,” I replied emphasizing the AP, which meant
advanced placement. That’s an honors course; my father would be impressed.
“Jones,
Lawrence Jones, that doesn’t sound Jewish. Is he Jewish?”
I
was sorely tempted to say forget about Jewish, ask me if he is white. But I was
too much of a coward. I knew all hell would break loose, and I really wanted to
go to this party. The way Lawrence described it, I was expecting quite an event
scene; it was definitely not going to be some Jewish country club
engagement party. “No, he isn’t Jewish,” I admitted, realizing that I was going
to lose anyway. Sure enough, my father refused to allow it.
“Is
he the boy you’ve been seeing?”
“Yeah,
I guess. I really don’t see him very much. I mean, it’s not like we’re
serious.”
“Even
if he was Jewish I wouldn’t allow this. Not on Shabbat,” he added.
Lawrence
had suggested plan B, just in case. This called for me sneaking out carrying my
party dress and shoes. He would borrow a friend’s car and be waiting for me
around the block. I would be able to change at his sister’s apartment. Could
you imagine a Jewish guy suggesting something like this? I couldn’t, at least
not in my high
school. Just the thought of it was exciting. I had never ever done anything
like this and I was really nervous, but I agreed.
After
we turn the clocks ahead in the spring, sundown, when Shabbat begins, comes
later, something I had forgotten. My father got home from services an hour
later than I expected. We sat down for dinner late. I had planned to sneak out
the back door after cleaning up the kitchen with my sister. My parents would be
sitting in the living room in the front of the house, probably reading. My
sister would retreat to her room where she’d watch TV-- -- definitely
not allowed on Shabbat but, hey, don’t- ask,- don’t- tell.
My parents must have known what she was doing although they obviously preferred
to think she was reading. Anyway, now everything was really delayed.
It
was close to 10 pm when I finally slipped out of the house. Lawrence would have
been waiting for me for over an hour. I hoped he was still there as I scampered
through our neighbor’s yard like I used to do when I was a little kid. As I
approached our meeting spot, I saw a car and two police cruisers. Lawrence was
standing and leaning with his hands on the roof of the car. The police were
frisking him. I was outraged. What could he have done? He was just waiting for
me, for Chrissake.
“What’s
wrong?” I demandedasked,
running up with my dress across one arm and holding my shoes in my hands.
“He is just waiting for me. We’re going to a party,” I said.
One
of the policemen turned to me. “Stay out of this,” snapped Lawrence.
It
was too late. The policeman asked me my name and address. He immediately
realized I wasn’t being picked up in front of my home. Uh oh. They called my
father, who does answer the phone on Shabbat because he’s a doctor. Damn. He
stormed out of the house to get me.
It
turned out the police noticed Lawrence sitting in the car for what they
considered an unusually long time and ran a check on the license plate. The car
was unregistered and uninsured. Lawrence actually got off pretty easily while
his friend, who supposedly owned the car, was hauled into traffic court. C’mon,
how petty can you get? My father was furious with me.
“It’s
not that he is black. It’s not even that the police were there. It’s
because you lied to us and snuck out of the house,” said my mother, as calmly
as she could. My father was too livid to even talk. I think that was half true.
Yes, I lied to them and snuck out of the house. But if Lawrence had been Jewish
and the police hadn’t been involved, I still think they would have responded a
whole lot differently.
My
parents grounded me like foreverindefinitely.
Although Lawrence was cordial in school, whatever we had was over. He wasn’t
going to ask me out again. At first I blamed my father for being so damn rigid.
I couldn’t wait until I turned 18 and went off to college and got out of his
house and didn’t have to follow his stupid rules. It was so unfair, I thought.
My
next boyfriend in high school was named
Brian McCarthy. We met in band. I played clarinet and he played trumpet. He had
brown hair cropped pretty close and a narrow mouth that curved in a smile that
almost looked like a sneer except that his real sneer, I later discovered,
didn’t look anything like a smile. He had green eyes that narrowed to the
merest slits when he laughed. He had a reputation for being bad and cultivated
a tough guy attitude. Everyone knew he drank and sometimes did drugs. Christine
thought he was really cute and scary. I thought he was dumb -- half his
courses were remedial courses -- and he was headed at best for the Army or, more likely, jail, but certainly
not college like
all the Jewish guys I knew. However, I agreed with Christine; he was kind
of cute and really sexy, with a sort of devilish twinkle in his slit eyes, but
I didn’t mention the devilish thing to Christine. She took the devil pretty
seriously. Like I
said, Brian
wasn’t Jewish. Even if he were, Mmy father would
be appalled if I dated a boy like Brian. That alone was enough to get me
interested.
Our
school held a lot of dances. I guess they thought it kept us off the streets. I
danced with Brian a few times at dances. Then he asked me to the movies. It was
a Saturday night. I asked my father and he reluctantly agreed. “Why don’t you
date Jewish boys?” he asked angrily.
“They
don’t ask me,” I replied flippantly.
“You
must be sending the wrong signals. What about David Erhlich? He’s called here a
few times.” my father persisted.
“He
calls to get me to attend USY things. He’s not interested in me, except to show
up at stupid USY events,” I said. David had grown up some since that Purim
dance when he thought I was more beautiful than Rebecca Schwartz, who had moved
beyond super model to full anorexic, even bulimic. I was sure she was throwing
up after every other meal. I didn’t know David very well since he now went to
Jewish High School. I saw him around the synagogue on occasion, usually when my
parents forced me to go. He had grown tall and his voice had deepened. I had
heard he was a good tennis player too, getting all the way to regionals in one
tournament. His sandy brown hair was curly and fell halfway over his ears.
However, he still wore ugly glasses, although at least he no longer wore the
kind that curled around the back of your ears.
“You
know, it is as easy for you to fall in love with a Jewish boy as with a
non-Jewish boy,” my mother chimed in.
“Who
said I’m falling in love with anyone? It’s just a date. We’re going to the
movies. We danced a few times at school dances. We went and got a soda. He’s
cute. He’s nice. He’s fun. He says funny things. And he wants to do things with
me. That’s all,” I snapped back.
“It’s
never that simple,” my mother added. I knew what she was thinking: if only I
would date one of the nice boys from the synagogue, from USY. But those boys
are so boring, so predictable. Besides, they weren’t banging down the doors to
date me. David, I had heard at one of the few USY things I attended, even had a
girlfriend so he wasn’t available anyway, not that I cared.
MAnyway,
my father reluctantly allowed me to date Brian. We could go to
movies or school dances. Sometimes after school we would get a soda or hang out
at thea
local pizza shop. On dates Brian would come to the door to get me.
My father would tell us when he expected meus home.
Brian hated meeting my father each time, and my father clearly disliked Brian.
My parents never said anything against Brian, but it was obvious they didn’t
like him or my seeing him. “What do you have against Brian?” I asked one
evening after he dropped me off, just before curfew as usual.
“He
is not the right boy for you,” said my mother.
“You
mean he’s not Jewish,” I corrected her.
“It
is more than that. Even if he were Jewish he wouldn’t be right for you. He’s trouble,” she said. She was right. He
had that aura of trouble. I thought it was more of a carefully cultivated
attitude than real, but it was kind of exciting, edgy. Maybe that’s what I
liked about Brian.
Brian
and I didn’t do too much of the sexual stuff, not as much as he wanted,
anyway. About the most we’d do is make out in his car. He wanted to do much
more and his hands were all over me. I liked the making out part except when he
tried to go too far. Then I would stop him and he would pout. He really was bad
and unlike his previous girlfriends, I didn’t let him go any further than I was readywanted
to go, which
wasn’t all that far. That’s the stuff we fought about most.
But
it wasn’t just Brian; Christine had the same trouble with the nice church boys
her parents fixed her up with or even the Jewish guys she sometimes dated. They
wanted to get into her pants just as much as Brian wanted to get into mine.
Now,
I knew I wasn’t going to be a virgin forever and I didn’t believe in saving
anything for marriage. Heck, I knew my mother wasn’t a virgin when she
got married just from some of the things she’d published; my father probably
wasn’t either. And what if IMaybe I’d
never marriedy?.
However, it still
had to be the right guy at the right time in the right place. I wasn’t sure
what any of that would be, but Brian McCarthy probably wouldn’t be in the
picture. I liked him and I loved the attention he paid to me in his tough ass
kind of way but this romance wasn’t going anywhere. I think we both knew it.
One
night he picked me up to go to the movies. When we got in the car, however, he
headed off in a
different direction. “Where are we going?” I asked.
“To
a party. A friend of mine is having a party. His folks left for the weekend.”
“That’s
not what we told my father,” I said, suddenly concerned.
“Don’t
worry about it. He said to be home by midnight and I promise you’ll be home by
midnight. In the meantime, we can have some real fun.” He flopped his right arm
around my shoulders as he drove and pulled me toward him. To get closer to him
I scrunched over to the left, as far as you can go anyway in a car with
bucket seats separated by a console. This is wrong, I thought. I was wearing a low
cut top that was pretty revealing, at least for me. His fingers
gently played around on top of my boobreasts.
Then again, this might be fun.
I
lost track of where we were driving. Finally, we pulled up in front of a large
house. It was filled with high school kids, but I didn’t recognize most of
them. Many of Brian’s
friendfriends went to
a parochial high school. Some music was playing. Brian and I sat on a couch in
the corner. There were other couples around. Brian started to kiss me and make
out. His hands were all over me. “Not with everybody here,” I whispered. He got
up, took my hand, and led me upstairs into a bedroom. He shut the door and
started to unbutton my blouse. I was scared and thrilled. He took off my blouse
and bra. I removed his shirt. Then we just stood there pressed against each
other as if we were slow dancing. We gently swayed to music no one else could
hear. He nuzzled my neck and kissed my shoulders and boobreasts.
It was heaven. I don’t know how long we stood that way. Then he led me to the
bed. On the bed he started unbuttoning my jeans. I pushed away his hand. “No,
not tonight,” I said quietly.
“Yes
tonight. This is our only chance,” he insisted.
“I’m
not ready. There will be other chances,” I pleaded.
He
started tugging at my pants. “No, I’m ready. I’ve been ready for weeks, you
fuckin’ tease,” he said angrily, more angry than I had ever heard him. I
started to push his hands away. He fought off my hands and started tugging
again at my jeans.
“No!”
I screamed and sat up. “No! No!”
He
slapped me hard across the face. “Shut up you stupid cunt. You’ve gone this
far. You’re not stopping here.” That’s when I saw his sneer; it was mean and
nasty, slicing
across his face like a jagged knife. He pushed me down on the bed. I
started kicking at him like mad. He punched me hard; I could taste blood in my
mouth. “Don’t you touch me,” I screamed.
Somebody
suddenly started knocking on the door. Brian jumped up, grabbed his shirt, and
stomped out of the room. Another couple was at the door; they poked their heads
in. “Are you all right? Do you need
help?” the girl asked.
“I’ll
be OK,” I muttered. They left. I must have been dazed. Slowly I picked up my
blouse and bra and put it on. Then I staggered into the hallway and wandered a
bit until I found a bathroom. In the bathroom I found a towel and started dabbing my mouth
and nose, both of which were bleeding.
I
stayed in the bathroom for a long time trying to figure out what to do. I had
to leave and get home, but I didn’t know how. Brian was downstairs someplace. I
didn’t want to see him again. I certainly didn’t want to ride in a car with
him. I decided to
call Christine. She had her license; maybe she could pick me up.
Somebody who needed to use the
bathroom started knocking insistently on the door. I unlocked the door and went
back to the bedroom. I flicked on the light and saw a phone on the night table.
On the bureau was some mail, including bills. I looked at the address and
called Christine’s house. Her mother answered
the phone: “Oh
she’s at the church. I don’t expect her until late. Is that you Miriam? Are you
all right?”home.
I remember mumbling something
vaguely intelligible and hanging up. I was desperate and couldn’t think of anyone else
to call so I called my parents. My mother answered the phone. I told her I had to get
out of there and gave
her the address. “Go outside onto the sidewalk. Your father will be there in a
few minutes,” she said calmly, reassuringly.
As
I slipped down the stairs and out of the house, I noticed Brian drinking with a
bunch of other guys. He didn’t notice me. My father pulled up a few moments
later. “Are you hurt? I will take you to the hospital,” he said quietly.
“No,
let’s just go home. I’ll be all right.”
At
home I briefly recounted what happened with Brian, leaving out the parts that I
enjoyed at the beginning, of course. When I finished, I added: “The same thing
could have happened with a Jewish guy, you know.”
“I
know,” said my father sadly. Then they each hugged me. “You did the right thing
to call,” added my mother. No lectures, no tirades, no I-told-you-so. I
appreciated that.
Although
I knew of David since nursery school, our paths only crossed at the synagogue.
Like I said, he went to Jewish Day School and then Jewish High School. I saw
him at USY events sometimes. Once we even worked on a big
mitzvah project, a reading thingproject
with an inner-city elementary school not too far away. Some of the USY kids
tutored there after school, which mainly consisted of reading to the youngest
children and helping older ones read by themselves. I only tutored for
a while in the spring when I wasn’t playing , but I played varsity
soccer orand
basketball. so I
couldn’t tutor during the fall and winter sports
seasons.
David
was great with the little kids he tutored. To help them read, he would come up
with all kinds of neat games and puzzles involving words and letters. He’d
write a simple word on the blackboard and the kids had to read it and do it, like jump or
fall. The kids loved it. They would jump and run and shout. David would put up
words faster and faster. It got really crazy, but the kids loved it. Where did
he come up with that stuff? Thinking back now, he truly was amazing and what he did with the
kids was awesomehe was amazing.
Maybe I even thought that at the time.
I
hung out a little bit with the USY kids at that time but only saw David as part
of the group. Everyone said he was really smart with computers, but he didn’t
seemed at all like the geeks I knew at school. He actually could string
together sentences without speaking techno-babble like virtual this or virtual
that or SSL or GNUgnu,
which I stupidly thought was some kind of animal like a moose.
David
actually was pretty popular amongwith the
USY crowd. He had grown tall and good looking, except for those stupid glasses.
Somebody should have told him or something. Anyway, sometimes he had a
girlfriend, but it never seemed to last long. In between girlfriends he asked
me out a few times. I only remember one dateI accepted once.
When I told my father, I thought he was going to have an orgasm. They knew
David and his parents from synagogue and thought he was perfect.
We
probably went to a movie or something, I’m not sure forget.
I guess I had a good time, but my parents were ready to start planning the
wedding. David asked me out a few more times but the basketball season had
begun and between that and school I became very busy. Anyway, it was a good excusereason
to put him off. How could I date a boy my parents so approved of? They were
disappointed. Too bad for them, I thought.
Throughout
that afternoon I sat thinking about all these stupid guys I had dated and about
David. I would keep leaning over
him, give him the kinds of fast little kisses he loved so much --machine gun kisses, he called
them,
because they came in rapid succession -- and whisper to him that I was there and
would never leave him. Sometimes he would stir a little. I would moisten his
lips and eyelids with a damp washcloth.
And
I would pray and pray and pray. Dear God, please make him well. God, I’ll do
whatever it takes. I’ll keep even more kosher. I’ll go to synagogue more
(although David and I already went almost every week). I’ll send my children to
Jewish day school. I’ll follow all the commandments, any commandment. Just save
him. Please God, save him.
Nurses
bustled in and out of the room. They would say hello but pretty much ignored
me, which was okayOK. They would change various bags and
bottles and check things and write on a clipboard. Once I asked if he would
make it. The nurse gave me some hopeful but evasive answer, something dumb like
we hope so. Duh. As far as I could tell, nothing had changed. At least he
didn’t seem to be getting worse; no alarms had gone off on any of the monitors.
I kept praying.
The
sun was setting. Israel lies on the eastern edge of the Mediterranean
Sea. It catches the most beautiful sunsets over the ocean. The water actually
turns pink as the sun, a blazing red ball, sinks below the ocean horizon. David
and I oohed and aahed over it the first night we were here. We sat on the hotel
balcony drinking wine and watching the light show. At home the sun rises over
the ocean but David and I never got up early enough to see it. The sunset
probably was equally beautiful tonight but I barely noticed.
“You
should get something to eat,” said a nurse, who entered the room. “You probably
haven’t eaten all day,” she added.
“I’m
fine. I’m not hungry,” I insisted. It was true; I didn’t feel hungry. Besides,
I didn’t want to leave David. It was enough when I left once to go to the
bathroom.
“Do
you have anybody in Israel, anybody who can be with you?” she asked.
“What
does it matter? How can they help him?” I asked dejectedly.
“They
can help you. Sitting here alone is very hard,” she replied.
I
thought about it; sitting here was hard, but there was nothing else I would
even consider doing. David and I had the names of some people from home whothat had moved
to Israel or were here studying for a year. Both sets of our parents pushed
pieces of paper with names and addresses on us before we left. But we had no
plans to call anybody. Hey, we were on our honeymoon. I don’t even know where
we put those names and phone numbers. Maybe we left them back home. “No,
there’s nobody I care to call, nobody who could help me. My parents are on the
way. So are David’s,” I said.
“I
will bring you something to eat. You should eat something,” said the nurse. She
returned a while later with a falafel sandwich, an Orangina, and a cookie. I
drank the Orangina and nibbled at the sandwich, but I wasn’t really hungry. I
did eat the cookie.
David
went to MIT for college. I guess he’s a geek after all, I
thought when I heard about it, but a. At
least he’ was
a smart geek. I ended up at Georgetown. I wanted to study something to do with economics and international
relations, but mainly I wanted
to to be
in the DC area because it seemed so exciting and I thought Georgetown was the
best school there. Christine, by the way, got into Brandeis, her first choice,
but her parents insisted she go to some fundamentalist Christian college down
south.
Of
course, Georgetown is a Catholic school. My parents were not happy, but given myI
had a strong interest in economics and international studies and Georgetown
had a good reputation for that. When we went to visited the school my
father saw that it had a really big Jewish student population and a very active
Jewish Student Association and a lot of Jewish programs so he was sold. I
didn’t intend to get involved in the Jewish programs, but I didn’t tell him
that. Anyway, Georgetown is where I met my anti-Semitic French boyfriend.
But
he wasn’t the only stupid boyfriend I had during those four years. FirstWell,
there was the frat boy, Marty. He actually
went to American University, which was in DC too. And he was actually Jewish. My father would have
been happy if I had ever told him, which I didn’t. Marty boasted to me that he
was the first Jewish guy in his fraternity, not that there was
anything outwardly Jewish about him that I could tell or that he cared at all about anything Jewish. If anything, it
looked to me like he spent most of his time hiding his Jewishness. I guess I did too. I certainly didn’t think about his
Jewishness or lack of it. It didn’t matter to me in the least. Anyway, heHe
tried to teachaught
me to drink beer, which I detest. Our dates consisted of going to his frat
house, drinking beer, dancing to CDs, and drinking more beer. Then I would
throw up and insist he take me home. After a few dates, he didn’t call me
anymore. I guess I flunked beer drinking.
Then
there was Gregory, my WASP boyfriend. He was really stuck up, but he was
British so it was OKexpected.
We went to the typical college parties and rock concerts and movies. I worked very hard
at trying to hide my Jewishness. Although my first name is Miriam, my last name
is Wilson, something my family picked up when they passed through Ellis Island
a couple of generations earlier. My grandfather’s brothers and cousins had come
before him and adopted the Wilson name. So my grandfather got the Wilson name
too. That made me Miriam Wilson; it didn’t sound like an obviously Jewish name.
In fact, in my high school there was another Miriam Wilson who was black,
except she spelled
it it Miryam with a Y, who
was black. So, I tried not to let on I was Jewish.
At
one point, Gregory’s parents planned to visit. We had been dating each other
exclusively for a few months by then. We weren’t living together or anything
like that but it seemed pretty serious to me. They offered to take Gregory and
his girlfriend ---- me -- out to dinner
at one of Washington’s fanciest restaurants, the kind of place where high
priced lobbyists wine and dine senators. It’s not my style, but I admit I was
excited by the prospect, at least for the novelty of it. I even had brought one
nice dress, I mean a knockout dress, to school with me.
Gregory
seemed a little nervous as his parent’s visit approached. He didn’t want me to
join him when he picked them up at the airport. He didn’t want me to meet them
at the hotel. He didn’t want me to spend any time with him and his parents except
for the fancy dinner, which we couldn’t avoid since they specifically asked
that he join them with his girlfriend. So, he must have at least told them he
had a girlfriend, but I was getting a little suspicious.
Finally,
I decided to bring up the issue directly. “Is there something up with your
parents? You know, something you don’t want me around for?” I asked. Bingo, I
scored a direct hit. Usually so cool and collected and reserved, Gregory
suddenly looked considerably uncomfortable.
“I mean, I can disappear for the weekend if you prefer,” I offered,
although I really was looking forward to going to that restaurant and wearing
my nice dress -- I looked like a
killer in that dress. I knew every man in the restaurant whothat
had any testosterone in his blood would be looking at me.
There
was a long pause. Clearly he was trying to figure out how to put into words
whatever it was he was going to say. “They’re not going to be happy with me
because of you,” he finally said.
I
tried to figure out what he meant. He didn’t say they wouldn’t be happy with me
but with him. Now I must have looked baffled.
“They
hoped I would go to school in the US and meet someone from the American upper
class, from the elite. They never thought I would get involved with a Jew. They
would never say that, of course, but they won’t be happy,” he explained. He
sounded sad, almost pathetic.
Now
I was even more confused. We had never talked about religion. I never told him I
was Jewish. I
was like Marty; I had submerged my Jewishness for all practical purposes. I
didn’t keep kosher. I ate moo shi pork in Chinese restaurants, gobbled up
shrimp at department receptions for visitinginternational
scholars, and deliberately avoided participating in most activities of the
Jewish Students Association. OK, I went to High Holiday services but that was
before I met Gregory. “How will they even know I’m Jewish? I’m not going to
wear a Jewish star or sprout horns?” I asked, flabbergasted.
“Are
you kidding!” he laughed. “Anybody can tell you are Jewish in an instant. You
act Jewish. You look Jewish. You would look Jewish even if you were wearing a
cross around your neck. You talk and think like a smart Jew. That may make you
attractive to me, but they will see it immediately,” he said. “And they won’t
be happy with me,” he added sullenly. I was shocked. I had worked so hard at
not appearing Jewish. I mean I deliberately worked at it. And to learn that all
my efforts were a failure. Well, thatIt really
was a shock andthat
later it started
me thinking about a lot of things.
Actually,
I was kind of insulted too. Remember, I was my father’s exotic beauty with my
mother’s Sephardic looks. “What do you mean I look Jewish? You could just as
easily say I was Iranian,” I arguedsaid,
trying to keep the pouting out of my voice.
“Yeah,
an Iranian until the first time you open your mouth,” he countered.
Anyway,
we went to that dinner with his parents,
and I did look awesome in that dress. Everyone watched me as we walked across
the dining room to our table. The static that crackled across the room was
sheer lust from the glances of all the men,men; even
Gregory’s father, who couldn’t take his eyes off me.
His parents were polite, courteous, pleasant, and cold, exactly as Gregory had
predicted. After dinner, they sent theo two of
us back to campus in a cab. The food, by the way, was terrific. I’ve never had
a meal that good or that pricey before or since.
My
romance with Gregory quickly ended after that. We talked about it, but he
wasn’t about to go against his parents’ wishes. For now they controlled the
money and the trust funds and the inheritances that would all be his, which I
gather were considerable. A middle class American Jew, even an upper middle
class one whose father was a doctor with a thriving practice and whose mother
was a published author and lecturer, was absolutely not in their game plan for
him in any way, shape, or form.
I
encouraged him to fight his parents on this on principle because I thought his parents’
anti-Semitismc
and class attitudes were despicable and outdated. “C’mon, this is the 21st
century. We’re supposed to be more enlightened,” I argued. But the truth was I
didn’t love Gregory so I didn’t push him very hard. He was fun and pleasant and
interesting, but I couldn’t imagine a lifelong relationship with him. I
couldn’t see him as the father of my children. I couldn’t imagine sharing my
life with him. Our values, our world views,, in the
end just seemed too far apart. Marrying him would be like condemning myself to
a lifetime of pretending to be something I wasn’t. And despite my best efforts,
my pretending hadn’t even been very successful.
Maybe
if I really, really loved him, but even then I doubt it would have worked out. Like I said, I
didn’t love him and he didn’t really love me, at least not that much. We parted
ways amicably. Eventually he started going with the daughter of a Congressmanional
committee chairman. A Congressman, even a committee
chair, wasn’t exactly the American elite but close enough for his
parents. She also was Irish Catholic, which was very bad -- what did they
expect him to find at Georgetown University -- but not nearly as bad as a Jew. I wish him
well.
The
whole thing with Gregory made me think about what would happen if I came home
with a non-Jewish guy that I wanted to marry. I knew my
parents would be upset, but I didn’t think they would disown me or sit shiva or
any of that kind of stuff. I guess I
always thought if he was a nice guy and loved me and I loved him, they would
come to accept him. You know, the liberal Jewish thing. And since I’m Jewish my
kids would always
be Jewish
no matter what.
But what I now was just beginning
to realize was that I might not be happy marrying a non-Jew either. I had always rejected pressure to marry Jewish on principle:
I wanted to follow my heart, marrying whoever it would lead me to and not discriminate
on the basis of race, color, creed, or national origin. That’s the American way,
right? Except after my experience with Gregory and my efforts at trying to not
be Jewish, I was starting to question that principle when it came to relationships and marriage and it bothered me.
During
the years I was at college I saw David a few times. Not duringin
the summer, which is what you might expect. That’s when I took a counselor
position at the same Jewish overnight camp I went to growing up. So I didn’t
get to spend much time at home in the summer. But occasionally I crossed paths
with David when we were both home during school vacations. At those times, my
parents were eager to get us together. “David’s dad tells me he’ll be home next
week too,” my father would say with a feigned casualness. Once they went so far
at one of those rare times we were both in town to invite David’s family to
join us for Shabbat dinner. Now that’s really pushing it, I thought.
I
actually liked David when I saw him. And we got along great. I could talk
comfortably with him. We laughed and joked around. We liked some of the same
music. Once he invited me to play tennis. He killed me, and he wasn’t even
trying. He actually felt bad about it. I’m a good athlete and an OK tennis
player, but he is great.
Anyway,
I might even have gotten something going with David then except for
the feeling that my parents were really manipulating this. David came with my
parents’ Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval, which immediately made him suspect
in my mind. I knew it was a stupid reaction. Still, it held me back. When
I was with David in these parent-approved situations David almost felt like a
brother. I tried very hard not tocouldn’t
see him in a romantic way although I knew he looked at me that way. Could a guy
my parents like so much really be my lover?
The
lastbig
romance of my college years was Kin-Leong Tay, who everyone called KL. KL was
thin and pretty tall for a Chinese guy. He was almost as tall as me so I made a
point of wearing flat shoes when we were together. He had a very boyish look,
sort of like David now that I think of it, but he had straight black hair and
not a trace of facial hair. We met while working on a team project for an
international economics class. He was American born and raised but spoke fluent
Chinese. And he knew from the start that I was Jewish. “Jews and Chinese are
very similar. Both are family-oriented and emphasize education,” he said on
several occasions.
“And
food. Both Jews and Chinese love Chinese food,” I would always add jokingly. He
would laugh, especially because his favorite meal was a burger and fries and a
shake, which he could eat for every day for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
KL
was sweet and thoughtful and serious. We had long discussions about
international affairs and followed the twists and turns of international
diplomacy like other people follow sports. He was quiet, but when he was angry
or excited he could be quite forceful. I saw that during some heated debates at
school. He also could be very funny and silly, especially when we were alone.
He was very concerned about his public image, however, feeling that he was
representing the Chinese American community in everything he did.
We
became lovers. I was the one who seduced him. He couldn’t resist the dress,
which I wore to a fancy department reception for some big shot that spoke on campus.
KL was an attentive and serious lover but never spent a whole night with mein
my room. He felt he had to be in his room in the morning, which
was when his parents mightwould
call. And they called a lot, even though it must have been pretty early for
them since
they lived in California. He was very respectful of his parents, which I
found endearing in an odd sort of way. I mean I love my parents, but I would
never act so deferential to them. They’d think I was sick or something.
KL
and I would study together. We took a few of the same classes. We went to lectures on campusevents by
with famous speakers. On weekends, when we weren’t studying, we
might hike in some of the wooded areas around DC. I
taught him about basketball and Wwe went to Georgetown basketball
games and all
sorts of activities on campus and we made love. But one thing we
never talked
about -- the only thing we
never talked about -- was our relationship and about our any future
together. Maybe we understood without saying anything specific that we had no
future together. He would marry a Chinese girl. I wasn’t suredidn’t
know whom I would marry although the Jewish or non-Jewish thing
increasingly crept into my thoughts whenever I was with KL., and at that point I
didn’t much care.
By
the way, my sister, who was in college by this time, ended up not following in
my stepspath.
She dated a string of Jewish guys and is even talking of eventually going to
the Jewish Theological Seminary to become a rabbi. My parents are thrilled.
Meanwhile, here I was plunging intowallowing in
the goyish world of international economics.
As
seniors we had begun thinking about what we would do next. KL knew exactly; he
was going to Stanford for graduate studies. He had been accepted. His parents
expected him to go there
and to do great things there. Besides, his parents lived
nearby and there was this huge Chinese community therenearby.
I
wasn’t sure where I would go or what I would do. I too had some interesting
possibilities in California, which, which
seemed attractive, especially the weather. I had never been to California. A
think-tank in Boston, however, had offered me a chance to work on a big international economic
study they were starting. It would lead almost automatically to a prestigious
graduate school program if I wanted to follow
it. They would even subsidize the tuition. And my family also
lived near Boston. KL seemed ambivalent about where I went. Although he wasn’t
actually discouraging me he clearly wasn’t encouraging me to join him in
California.
Then
one day in the spring David called.I received a telephone
call from David. We had been in touch a little bit, indirectly,
mainly through a USY email list-serve that kept everyone up to
date on what other people were doing. I didn’t post anything to it, but I saw
messages other people posted. A few were about David. He actually had gotten
involved in some leading edge kind of project; something to do with organic
computers and non-deterministic systems -- really advanced, heavy stuff that I
certainly didn’t understand. One of his professors traveled around to different
conferences and David often went with him as a research assistant. He would post a
message about where he was going and try to connect with any USY
friends who were nearby. So maybe I shouldn’t have been surprised
when he called. He was in DC for a conference. Maybe I missed that USY message.
Anyway, could we get together?
As
I said, I was still dating KL pretty seriously at that time. But KL sometimes
went to his brother’s house on weekends. He had an older married brother nearby
and visited regularly, especially when other relatives passed through. And his
relatives seemed to be always coming through the DC area. Sometimes he took me
along so I didn’t feel that he was trying to hide me from his family, something
I was wary about after Gregory. Everyone was pleasant, even friendly, but I
clearly felt like an English-speaking outsider in a Chinese world. Still, the
Chinese food at those gatherings was awesome. How KL could prefer burgers was
beyond me.