What a Lovely Couple (Part 2)
by David V. Matthews
November 6, 2006 (revised March 21, 2007)
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     Late one night in late September, I was in my dorm room, lying on my bed, reading my world geography textbook (and trying my darnedest to care about Kuikkalammit, Finland), when I heard the door slowly start to open.  I looked up from my textbook and saw Peyton slowly walk into the room.  He slowly closed the door.  I hadn�t seen him all day.
     �Hey,� I said.
     �I got cut from the lacrosse team this afternoon,� he said.
     �Really?�
     �Yeah.�
     �I�m sorry to hear that.� 
     �Thanks.�  He sat on his bed, across from mine.  �I was the only one that got cut.  The coach said, he said, �Sorry, you�re a good player and all, but I have too many people playing midfield.  Nothing personal.��  Peyton tried to grin.  �Nothing personal.  I think I actually got kicked off cuz I quit pledging Theta Pi.  You don�t
have to join Theta Pi, but it�s highly recommended.  Everyone on the team belongs to it.  The coach still belongs to it.  He wears a Theta Pi ring as big as, like, two-and-a-half of his heads put together.�
     �
Only two-and-a-half?  Pretty understated.�
     �Yeah, ha ha�.You know, it won�t be easy telling my parents I got cut.  I don�t know if they like lacrosse, but they love the fact that I play it.  They went to all my games in high school and always cheered the loudest for me, win or lose.  More like lose.  The team lost a
lot, especially last season.  We didn�t win one game last season.�
     �But you had fun, right?�
     �Yeah, loads of fun.  Especially in our last game.  We lost 14 to nothing, our worst game ever.  We all sucked that day, but I
really sucked.  I kept dropping the ball and running into my teammates.  I could hear my parents weren�t cheering as much as usual, as if I deserved any cheers.  Anyway, after the game, they took me to Burger Chef, which was unusual, cuz we always ate at Winky�s after each game.  We never ate at Burger Chef, but there we were.  As soon as we went in, my dad yelled �ATTENTION!  ATTENTION!�  He announced to everyone there that I was his son, and that I was the best lacrosse player in the county.  A few people clapped.  Then my mom, she actually raised her fist and cheered.�  Peyton raised his fist and cheered. �WOOOOOO!�
     �Ha ha!�
     Peyton lowered his fist.  �Then we left the restaurant.  We didn�t even order anything.  My parents were so proud of me, they just wanted to brag to someone at the first place they could find.  Then we went to Winky�s as usual, and once again, my dad said the same thing about me, and my mom raised her fist and cheered.�  Peyton raised his fist, said �Woo,� and lowered his fist.
     We�d never told each other much about our personal lives; we�d implicitly wanted to stay in fun-loving roommate mode.
     �You must have a good relationship with your parents,� I said.
     �Mm-hmm� he said.
     �Weirdo.�
     �Excuse me?�
     �
My parents and I have a normal relationship.  That is, a lousy one.  We get along only when they ignore me, which they do most of the time.  Otherwise, they�ll point out my faults to me in excruciating detail.  I'm weak.  I�m fat.  I�m lazy.  I don�t take care of my sweater vests.  I should be more like my father.  They want me to be an exact duplicate of him.  I couldn�t apply to any other colleges because he�d gone here, and my parents wanted to create a family tradition.  A family tradition. He even pulled some strings and got me assigned to this room, the room he himself had lived in as a freshman.  Big deal.�
     �Well�I�m sorry you don�t get along with your parents, but it sounds like your main problem�s with your father.  I learned in psych class that the father-son relationship is pretty important.  The
mother-son relationship is, too, but you learn how to adopt the male gender role mostly from your father.�  Peyton, like me, hadn�t declared a major.  �If you have a dysfunctional relationship with your father, that can mess up the way you behave in your male gender role as an adult.�
     �Oh
really, Dr. Freud?�
     �Yes, really, and we study Carl Jung in that class, too, but never mind.  The point is, you have to overcome your relationship problems with your father.  Now, maybe you should cut off all contact with him or maybe not, but you do need to escape from his shadow, form your own personality, if you want to become a productive adult male in this society.�
     �And how do I escape from his shadow and form my own personality?�
     �I dunno.  Maybe go to a therapist first?�
     �Yeah, I�ll do that after I pay for my Rolls-Royce.�
     �Or you could try some symbolic gesture.  Dr. Jung talked about symbolic gestures, I think.�
     An idea blazed into my head.
     �Yeah, that Dr. Jung�quite a guy,� I said as I stood up.  �I�m going out for a walk.�
     I left the room.  I walked to the lobby, to the picture next to the snack machine.  The picture of the dorm�s ribbon-cutting ceremony from �55.  I was the only one in the lobby.  I took a breath.  I took down the picture.  I turned it over, slid off the cardboard backing, and removed the photo.  Pretty cheap frame�it looked like plastic.  Still no one else around.  I took another breath.  I tore the bottom of the photo, a slight tear below my father�s image.  I paused.  I continued tearing, pretty rapidly, until I�d torn him out of the photo, taking Douthart with him.  For some reason, I thought
the authorities would have suspected me first had I just torn out my father.  I slid the photo back into its frame, slid the backing back on, and rehung the picture in its original location. 
     Then I stared at the piece I�d torn out.  My father�s smile had been a little endearing back then, at my age.  Douthart still looked like a jerk.  I tore the piece into tiny pieces and dropped them into the trash can next to the snack machine.  I rearranged the other trash to hide them.
     I was now a miscreant.

     ��The FBI reported today that the crime rate in America in 1978 rose two percent over the previous year,�� Mr. Shaft told us in class one day in late October.  He was sitting behind his desk, reading us an Associated Press article from that afternoon�s edition of the local paper,
The Henning Herald.  The front page covered the local Presbyterian church�s recent fall harvest festival.  The front page always had something about a festival or a pancake breakfast or a bachelor auction or a pet fashion show.    
     ��Violent crimes, the bureau said, increased five percent and property crimes rose two percent.��  Mr. Shaft didn�t use a textbook.  Instead, he would occasionally read us articles from the
Herald in a disgusted but beaten-down manner.  ��More recent preliminary figures show that the crime rate has jumped sharply in 1979, rising by nine percent for the first half of the year when compared with the same period in 1978.��  He closed the paper, folded it into quarters, and dropped it onto his desk, squinting his eyes.  He would squint his eyes after reading something he�d found especially repulsive, as if to squeeze the words out of his head.  �This is life under liberalism.  Liberalism equals crime.�
     �But doesn�t crime occur under conservatism?� I asked.  �Wasn�t there a lot of crime during the Nixon years?�
     �Sure, but he was essentially a liberal, what with all his social programs and his d�tente with the Russians.  He talked a good game about law and order but never followed through.�
     �Maybe that�s because he was breaking the law himself, with Watergate.�  Mr. Shaft didn�t assign homework or give tests.  Instead, he based your final grade first on how well you played devil�s advocate, prodding him on during his rants (the better the rants, the higher the grade); and second on how well you kissed his ass.
     �The hell with Watergate,� he said.  �Just a bunch of misdemeanors compared to the violence on our streets.  Yes, Nixon was careless enough to get caught committing these crimes, these
so-called crimes, but the real crime was caving in to his fellow liberals instead of burning the tapes and cracking down on murderers, rapists, druggies, and other scum.  His approval rating would have gone through the roof.  He should have fought for the death penalty more than he did.  Getting rid of the death penalty was one of the worst mistakes of the past 25 years.�
     �But does the death penalty really deter crime?� Peyton asked.
     �Of course.  If you�re executed, you don�t commit any more crimes.�
     �But does it prevent
noncriminals from becoming criminals?�
     �I�ll admit I don�t know.  Nobody knows, but it doesn�t matter.  The death penalty has symbolic value.  It�s a symbol of civilized society.�
     �Symbols are for losers,� Lissi said, the first time she�d said anything in this class.
     �Pardon me, Miss Kernahan?�
     �Symbols are for losers.  Symbols don�t get anything constructive done, other than making people feel good.  Symbols don�t actually reduce crime, in other words.  I know how to make the death penalty a
true deterrent, rather than just a symbol.�
     �Do tell us, please.�
     �Well, every few months, the government should choose a prisoner at random from anywhere in the United States.  Maybe have a computer do the choosing, to make the choice more impartial.  The government should choose someone who did something minor, like shoplifting or pot-smoking.  Something nonviolent.  The government should make a big deal about choosing this prisoner, then a day later,
execute him or her, live on national TV, so to speak.  The execution should be as slow and painful as possible.  Maybe the president could do it himself.  Yes, he should do it himself, then say that if the government can do this to Public Enemy Number One Million, think of what it can do to a really serious criminal when it comes to the death penalty.� 
     Mr. Shaft leaned forward in his chair.
     �You can bet people will think twice before committing any crime and winding up behind bars,� Lissi added.
     �But wouldn�t, say, the ACLU sue the government over this?� Mr. Shaft asked.
     �Yes, but so what?  More publicity for the government.  Plus the ACLU wouldn�t win.  The public�s sick of crime.  The president would be so popular after this, that Congress and the courts couldn�t touch him.�
     Mr. Shaft smiled. 
     �Even a liberal president would be popular, but then liberals don�t have the guts to do stuff like that,� Lissi said.
     �I suppose they don�t,� Mr. Shaft said.  He glanced at his watch.  �Well, I�d like to discuss this further, but our time�s up.�  He intoned his usual closing line:  �Have a good day, and may our country flourish.�
     Lissi, Peyton, and I left the room together.  I�d never had any contact with her outside of class, by choice.  I didn�t know about Peyton.
     �So how
would you execute pot-smokers?� I asked her as we walked down the hall.  �By cutting them up with the shards from broken Cheech and Chong records?�
     �No, I�d use Robert Goulet records�more brutal,� she replied.
     �Who�s Robert Goulet?� Peyton asked.
     �He�s the next Delford Dawes, minus the bell-bottoms.�
     �Hmph.�
     �No, seriously,� I said. �Were you serious in there?�
     �Indeed I was,� she said.  The three of us got to the building exit.  �I was serious about offering up political views from a
feminine perspective.�  She trotted through the door and across campus.  Peyton and I stood watching her.

     That night, I received a phone call alone in my room.
     �Hello,� I said.
     �Hi, Gerry.  How are you doing?�
     �Fine, Dad.  How are you doing?�
     �You could say my life�s going satisfactorily.�
     �That�s nice.�
     �Yes�.But I didn�t call you just to exchange banalities, ha ha.  I called because I have some news for you.  I got you a job on campus, at the Administration Building, as a part-time office assistant.�
     �Really?�
     �Of course.�
     ��Uh, thanks, Dad, but why?  Are we running out of money?�
     �No, it�s time you learned some responsibility.  I had that job myself when I went to Henning.  First job I ever had, and one of the best.  I learned how to thrive in the world of employment.�
     �Great, Dad.  Great that you learned how to thrive.  But if you had wanted me to work, you should have said something.  I could have found my own job.�
     �Uh-huh.  Anyway, you start tomorrow morning at eight.  When you get there, report to the front desk.�
     �Okay.�
     �And don�t forget to wear your best clothes.�
     �You mean like the shirt with pig�s blood on it?  
     �No, I mean like your
Easter bonnet with all the frills upon it, smart-mouth.  This is one of the most prestigious jobs on campus.  I put a lot of effort into getting you this job, so don�t blow it.�
     �Okay.�
     �Do you promise not to blow it?�
     �I
promise, Dad.�
     �Very good.�
     ��Is there anything else, Dad?�
     �No.  Tomorrow morning at eight at the Administration Building.  Don�t forget.�
     �I won�t.�
     �Don�t be late.�
     �I won�t.�
     �Very good.�
     �Yeah.�
     �Goodbye.� 
     �Goodbye.�
     My father hung up. 
     That was the first and only time he phoned me at college. 
     He hadn�t mentioned anything about his picture, the ribbon-cutting picture.  He certainly would have mentioned
something had he known about it.  (Same with my mother, who phoned me every week to describe everything noteworthy my father had done since her last call, from posing with handicapped Cub Scouts for a photo in the front section of the Beaver County Times, to eating some delicious stuffed peppers at some retirement dinner at the Fez.) 
     I hung up the phone and walked out to the lobby.  Yep, the picture was still there, the way I�d left it.  I hadn�t looked at it since, shall we say, improving it a month earlier.

TO BE CONTINUED

I am the epitome of mental health.  Just ask the invisible, anthropomorphic, seventeen-foot green buzzsaw that I keep running into whenever I roam around the University of Pittsburgh....Fiction, Home.  

� 2006 David V. Matthews
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