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Authors: Jonathan Safran Foer

Tags: #Fiction

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (11 page)

BOOK: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
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  • I want to buy a ticket to Dresden.
  • What are you doing here?
  • You have to go home. You should be in bed.
  • Let me take you home.
  • You're being crazy. You're going to catch a cold.
  • You're going to catch a colder.

 

HEAVY BOOTS

HEAVIER BOOTS

 

Twelve weekends later was the first performance of
Hamlet
, although it was actually an abbreviated modern version, because the real
Hamlet
is too long and confusing, and most of the kids in my class have ADD. For example, the famous 'To be or not to be' speech, which I know about from the
Collected Shakespeare
set Grandma bought me, was cut down so that it was just, 'To be or not to be, that's the question.'

Everyone had to have a part, but there weren't enough real parts, and I didn't go to the auditions because my boots were too heavy to go to school that day, so I got the part of Yorick. At first that made me self-conscious. I suggested to Mrs. Rigley that maybe I could just play tambourine in the orchestra or something. She said, 'There is no orchestra.' I said, 'Still.' She told me, 'It'll be terrific. You'll wear all black, and the makeup crew will paint your hands and neck black, and the costume crew will create some sort of a papier-mâché skull for you to wear over your head. It'll really give the illusion that you don't have a body.' I thought about that for a minute, and then I told her my better idea. 'What I'll do is, I'll invent an invisibility suit that has a camera on my back that takes video of everything behind me and plays it on a plasma screen that I'll wear on my front, which will cover everything except my face. It'll look like I'm not there at all.' She said, 'Nifty.' I said, 'But is Yorick even a part?' She whispered into my ear, 'If anything, I'm afraid you'll steal the show.' Then I was excited to be Yorick.

Opening night was pretty great. We had a fog machine, so the cemetery was just like a cemetery in a movie. 'Alas, poor Yorick!' Jimmy Snyder said, holding my face, 'I knew him, Horatio.' I didn't have a plasma screen, because the costumes budget wasn't big enough, but from underneath the skull I could look around without anyone noticing. I saw lots of people I knew, which made me feel special. Mom and Ron and Grandma were there, obviously. Toothpaste was there with Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton, which was nice, and Mr. and Mrs. Minch were there, too, because The Minch was Guildenstern. A lot of the Blacks that I had met in those twelve weekends were there. Abe was there. Ada and Agnes were there. (They were actually sitting next to each other, although they didn't realize it.) I saw Albert and Alice and Allen and Arnold and Barbara and Barry. They must have been half the audience. But what was weird was that they didn't know what they had in common, which was kind of like how I didn't know what the thumbtack, the bent spoon, the square of aluminum foil, and all those other things I dug up in Central Park had to do with each other.

I was incredibly nervous, but I maintained my confidence, and I was extremely subtle. I know, because there was a standing ovation, which made me feel like one hundred dollars.

The second performance was also pretty great. Mom was there, but Ron had to work late. That was OK, though, because I didn't want him there anyway. Grandma was there, obviously. I didn't see any of the Blacks, but I knew that most people go to only one show unless they're your parents, so I didn't feel too bad about that. I tried to give an extra-special performance, and I think I did. 'Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him, Horatio; a really funny and excellent guy. I used to ride on his back all the time, and now, it's so awful to think about!'

Only Grandma came the next night. Mom had a late meeting because one of her cases was about to go to trial, and I didn't ask where Ron was because I was embarrassed, and I didn't want him there anyway. As I was standing as still as I could, with Jimmy Snyder's hand under my chin, I wondered,
What's the point of giving an extremely subtle performance if basically no one is watching?

Grandma didn't come backstage to say hi before the performance the next night, or bye after, but I saw that she was there. Through the eye sockets I could see her standing in the back of the gym, underneath the basketball hoop. Her makeup was absorbing the lighting in a fascinating way, which made her look almost ultraviolet. 'Alas, poor Yorick.' I was as still as I could be, and the whole time I was thinking,
What trial is more important than the greatest play in history?

The next performance was only Grandma again. She cried at all the wrong times and cracked up at all the wrong times. She applauded when the audience found out the news that Ophelia drowned, which is supposed to be bad news, and she booed when
Hamlet
scored his first point in the duel against Laertes at the end, which is good, for obvious reasons.

'This is where his lips were that I used to kiss a lot. Where are your jokes now, your games, your songs?'

Backstage, before closing night, Jimmy Snyder imitated Grandma to the rest of the cast and crew. I guess I hadn't realized how loud she was. I had gotten so angry at myself for noticing her, but I was wrong, it was her fault. Everyone noticed. Jimmy did her exactly right – the way she swatted her left hand at something funny, like there was a fly in front of her face. The way she tilted her head, like she was concentrating incredibly hard on something, and how she sneezed and told herself, 'God bless me.' And how she cried and said, 'That's sad,' so everyone could hear it.

I sat there while he made all the kids crack up. Even Mrs. Rigley cracked up, and so did her husband, who played the piano during the set changes. I didn't mention that she was my grandma, and I didn't tell him to stop. Outside, I was cracking up too. Inside, I was wishing that she were tucked away in a portable pocket, or that she'd also had an invisibility suit. I wished the two of us could go somewhere far away, like the Sixth Borough.

She was there again that night, in the back row, although only the first three rows were taken. I watched her from under the skull. She had her hand pressed against her ultraviolet heart, and I could hear her saying, 'That's sad. That's so sad.' I thought about the unfinished scarf, and the rock she carried across Broadway, and how she had lived so much life but still needed imaginary friends, and the one thousand thumb wars.

MARGIE CARSON:

Hey,
Hamlet
, where's Polonius?

JIMMY SNYDER:

At Supper.

MARGIE CARSON:

At supper! Where?

JIMMY SNYDER:

Not where he eats, but where he's eaten.

MARGIE CARSON:

Wow!

JIMMY SNYDER:

A king can end up going through the guts of a beggar.

I felt, that night, on that stage, under that skull, incredibly close to everything in the universe, but also extremely alone. I wondered, for the first time in my life, if life was worth all the work it took to live. What exactly made it worth it? What's so horrible about being dead forever, and not feeling anything, and not even dreaming? What's so great about feeling and dreaming?

Jimmy put his hand under my face. 'This is where his lips were that I used to kiss a lot. Where are your jokes now, your games, your songs?'

Maybe it was because of everything that had happened in those twelve weeks. Or maybe it was because I felt so close and alone that night. I just couldn't be dead any longer.

ME:

Alas, poor
Hamlet
[
I take
JIMMY SNYDER'
s face into my hand
] I knew him, Horatio.

JIMMY SNYDER:

But Yorick…you're only…a skull.

ME:

So what? I don't care. Screw you.

JIMMY SNYDER:

[whispers] This is not in the play. [He looks for help from MRS. RIGLEY, who is in the front row, flipping through the script. She draws circles in the air with her right hand, which is the universal sign for 'improvise.']

ME:

I knew him, Horatio; a jerk of infinite stupidity, a most excellent masturbator in the second-floor boys' bathroom – I have proof. Also, he's dyslexic.

JIMMY SNYDER:

[Can't think of anything to say]

ME:

Where be your gibes now, your gambols, your songs?

JIMMY SNYDER:

What are you talking about?

ME:

[Raises hand to scoreboard] Succotash my cocker spaniel, you fudging crevasse-hole dipshiitake!

JIMMY SNYDER:

Huh?

ME:

You are guilty of having abused those less strong than you: of making the lives of nerds like me and Toothpaste and The Minch almost impossible, of imitating mental retards, of prank-calling people who get almost no phone calls anyway, of terrorizing domesticated animals and old people – who, by the way, are smarter and more knowledgeable than you – of making fun of me just because I have a pussy…And I've seen you litter, too.

JIMMY SNYDER:

I never prank-called any retards.

ME:

You were adopted.

JIMMY SNYDER:

[Searches audience for his parents]

ME:

And nobody loves you.

JIMMY SNYDER:

[His eyes fill with tears]

ME:

And you have amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

JIMMY SNYDER:

Huh?

ME:

On behalf of the dead…[
I pull the skull off my head. Even though it's made of papier-mâché it's really hard. I smash it against JIMMY SNYDER's head, and I smash it again. He falls to the ground, because he is unconscious, and I can't believe how strong I actually am. I smash his head again with all my force and blood starts to come out of his nose and ears. But I still don 't feel any sympathy for him. I want him to bleed, because he deserves it. And nothing else makes any sense. DAD doesn't make sense. MOM doesn't make sense. THE AUDIENCE doesn't make sense. The folding chairs and fog-machine fog don't make sense. Shakespeare doesn't make sense. The stars that I know are on the other side of the gym ceiling don't make sense. The only thing that makes any sense right then is my smashing JIMMY SNYDER's face. His blood. I knock a bunch of his teeth into his mouth, and I think they go down his throat. There is blood everywhere, covering everything. I keep smashing the skull against his skull, which is also RON's skull (for letting MOM get on with life) and MOM's skull (for getting on with life) and DAD's skull (for dying) and GRANDMA's skull (for embarrassing me so much) and DR. FEIN's skull (for asking if any good could come out of DAD's death) and the skulls of everyone else I know. THE AUDIENCE is applauding, all of them, because I am making so much sense. They are giving me a standing ovation as I hit him again and again. I hear them call
]

THE AUDIENCE:

Thank you! Thank you, Oskar! We love you so much! We'll protect you!

It would have been great.

I looked out across the audience from underneath the skull, with Jimmy's hand under my chin. 'Alas, poor Yorick.' I saw Abe Black, and he saw me. I knew that we were sharing something with our eyes, but I didn't know what, and I didn't know if it mattered.

It was twelve weekends earlier that I'd gone to visit Abe Black in Coney Island. I'm very idealistic, but I knew I couldn't walk that far, so I took a cab. Even before we were out of Manhattan, I realized that the $7.68 in my wallet wasn't going to be enough. I don't know if you'd count it as a lie or not that I didn't say anything. It's just that I knew I had to get there, and there was no alternative. When the cab driver pulled over in front of the building, the meter said $76.50. I said, 'Mr. Mahaltra, are you an optimist or a pessimist?' He said, 'What?' I said, 'Because unfortunately I only have seven dollars and sixty-eight cents.'

'Seven dollars?'

'And sixty-eight cents.'

'This is not happening.'

'Unfortunately, it is. But if you give me your address, I promise I'll send you the rest.' He put his head down on the steering wheel. I asked if he was OK. He said, 'Keep your seven dollars and sixty-eight cents.' I said, 'I promise I'll send you the money. I promise.' He handed me his card, which was actually the card of a dentist, but he had written his address on the other side. Then he said something in some other language that wasn't French. 'Are you mad at me?'

Obviously I'm incredibly panicky about roller coasters, but Abe convinced me to ride one with him. 'It would be a shame to die without riding the Cyclone,' he told me. 'It would be a shame to die,' I told him. 'Yeah,' he said, 'but with the Cyclone you can choose.' We sat in the front car, and Abe lifted his hands in the air on the downhill parts. I kept wondering if what I was feeling was at all like falling.

In my head, I tried to calculate all of the forces that kept the car on the tracks and me in the car. There was gravity, obviously. And centrifugal force. And momentum. And the friction between the wheels and the tracks. And wind resistance, I think, or something. Dad used to teach me physics with crayons on paper tablecloths while we waited for our pancakes. He would have been able to explain everything.

The ocean smelled weird, and so did the food they were selling on the boardwalk, like funnel cakes and cotton candy and hot dogs. It was an almost perfect day, except that Abe didn't know anything about the key or about Dad. He said he was driving into Manhattan and could give me a ride if I wanted one. I told him, 'I don't get in cars with strangers, and how did you know I was going to Manhattan?' He said, 'We're not strangers, and I don't know how I knew.'

BOOK: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
2.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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