After dinner, things began looking up. The 18½-minute gap on the latest White House tape had just been revealed, and what pleasure it gave us all! Four generations of Baschs buzzed with the news of the Rose Mary Reach. Spurred on by the news photos of Rose Mary Woods spread-eagled between the foot pedal of her tape recorder and the phone behind her as if awaiting a quick roll in the hay with Nixon, we laughed and chortled together that now, finally, Nixon was going to get his. Good for us! Good for America! From the very tiniest Basch, my brother's four-year-old daughter, who was learning to play with her toy phone by picking it up and spread-eagling herself and screaming RO-MARY REACH RO-MARY REACH, through my brother, who seemed to despise Nixon even more than the rest of us, past my father, who was interested in the technical aspects of the erasure, foreshadowing the panel of experts who would show, beyond shadow of a doubt, that âthere were four to nine consecutive manual erasures' and who'd conclude that âthe event could not have happened by accident,' and finally, to my grandfather, the only one of his generation left, who smiled a wise smile and said only, âAfter all these years, to see this, is a wonderful thing.'
During a lull in the conversation my grandfather stood up and said to me, âWell, now, Doctor, now I get free advice. Let's go.'
We went into my room and sat down, and he said, âNah, I don' wanna talk with you about advice,' and he pulled his chair up opposite me and leaned over the way old men do, and I remembered his wife, perenially sitting in back of him, an echo over his shoulder, now dead.
âSo you know,' he said, âyou're the oldest grandchild, and I remember the day you were born. I hoid the news in Saratoga. I was president of the Italian American Grocers of Manhattan. We had our convention dere dat year.'
âA Jew as president of the Italian American Grocers?'
âYeh. The whole t'ing was Jews. You're an educated man, I'm asking youâwould you buy from an Italian? They bought their spaghetti from us. After Polish and Yiddish, next I loined Italian. Den English. Basch's Italian American Grocery, that was me, then. I got âblack hand' letters from the Mafia, the woiks. Even in Kolomea in Poland, we were grocers. My father made all his money during the War with Japan: he bought up hides, and people said to him you're crazy what you buying these hides for, and he said never mind, and when war came, they needed them hides.'
âWhat for?'
âBoots for the soldiers. To get to Japan. Ah, my healt's not too badâa little trouble with the legs. But I want to know if I got something bad, âcause dese days, dey can cure. I knew dis ItalianâNinth Avenue, nice boy. Oiy did dey cut himâa scar here to here, and here to here. But den, he ran around like a chicken. Not like some peopleâa little growt, and what do they say? Too busy, too busy. And den bang, dead. I'll fight like hell to live.' He paused, and moved closer, until his knees almost touched mine and I could see the little clouds of cataract smothering his eyes. âDat goil of yours she's a nice goil, isn't she?'
âYes, she is.'
âSo what are you waiting? You don't got another one, do you?'
I tried not to let on that I had another one.
âSo why wait? Be a
mensch!
I never waited. Sure, you couldn't wait den, but you know your grandma never wanted to marry me, never? You know what I did? I got a gun, and held it to her head, and I said, Geiger, marry me or I kill you. How about dat, eh?'
We chuckled, but then he got sad and said, âYou know, in all dem years with her, I never went with another woman, never. Believe me, chances I had. In Saratoga. Chances plenty.'
I felt bad about what I was doing with Molly.
âYou're a smart fella. You see people from these Noising Homes all the times, in your hospital, right? Dey bring dem dere?'
âYes, Gramp, they do.'
âI never wanted to leave Magaw Place, never. I had my Club, my friends. When Grandma died, your father forced me to leave, to dis Home. A man like me in a place like dat. Sure, it's not bad in some waysâpeople to play poker, the shul right dere, it's all right.'
âIt's safe too,' I said, remembering how he'd gotten mugged.
âSafe? What do I care safe? No, dat don't worry me. Never did. It's no good. The noiseâwe're in the flight path to Kennedy, would you believe? Dey treat you worse den a dog! All I did, all my life, and now dis. People die every day. It's a terrible, terrible . . .'
He started to cry. I felt desperate.
âIt's a bad t'ing, dis. Who visits? Talk to your father, tell him I don't want to stay dere like an animal. He'll listen to you. I loved Magaw Place. I'm not a baby, I could have stayed there myself. You remember Magaw Place?'
âSure, Gramp,' I said, my mind filled with plush purple couches in a dark vestibule and the creaking metal-slatted elevator and then the childhood thrill of running down the long peculiar-smelling corridor toward Gram and Gramp's door, which would be thrown open and filled with their embraces. âSure.'
âAnd your father forced me to move out. So talk to himâdere's still time for me to move from dat home. Hereâa little
gelt
from me, for your office, Dr. Basch.'
I took the ten-dollar bill, and sat there as he got up. I knew how terrible it was. My father, adrift with the question of how to handle a single elderly parent, had found his solution in the standard middle-class ethos: âship them to the gomer homes.' Cattle in boxcars. I was mad. At the time he'd done it, I'd asked him why, and all he'd say was, âIt's the best thing for him, he can't live there alone. The home is nice. We saw it. There are a lot of things there for him to do, and they take care of them there pretty good.' How much my grandfather had gone through, and how little was left for him now. He would turn into a gomer. I knew, even better than him, where the ride from the nursing home would end. An ominous thought came to me: as he began to get demented, I'd visit him in the home, a syringeful of cyanide like a bar of candy in my pocket. He wouldn't be a gomer, no.
We rejoined the others. Things were cheery and bright. My mother, sensing my ambivalence about medicine, marched out a story: âYou're never satisfied, Roy. You're like my great-uncle Thaler, my father's father's brother. The whole Thaler family were merchants in Russiaâsolid steady work, selling cloth, food, I think they even had the whiskey license in the town. But my great-uncle wanted to be a sculptor. Sculptor? Who ever heard of that? They laughed. They told him to be like all the rest. And then once, in the dead of night, he snuck into the barn, stole the best horse, and rode away, and no one ever saw or heard from him again.'
Several hours later Berry deposited me again outside the doors of the E.W. of the House. As I entered the waiting room at midnight and said hello to Abe, I gave thanks that during Thanksgiving with my family I'd been able to get some sleep.
The policemen were sitting at the nursing station, as if awaiting my midnight arrival, and Gilheeny boomed out his opener: âHappy holiday greetings to you, Dr. Roy, and I expect that in the lap of your family, with your girlfriend in the lovely red Volvo, you have had a wonderful time.'
I found myself relieved that they were there. I asked whether they'd had a good Thanksgiving as well.
âRed is a fine color,' said the bushy redhead. âThere is a continuity to the unconscious processes, at home, at play, at work, according to Freud and resident Cohen, and the continuity of the red of the Thanksgiving cranberry and the potential red of human bloodshed we observe nightly on our beat is pleasing to our senses.'
âThis Cohen is talking to you about the unconscious?' I asked.
âAs Freud discovered and as Cohen points out,' said Quick, âthe process of free association is liberating, enabling the darkness of the child-policeman to light up with the understanding of the adult. See this lead billy club?'
I saw it.
âThe crack of this lead stick on the elbow is a more sure and fail-safe blow, much to the consternation of those writing TV thrillers,' said Quick. âTo crack an elbow with the understanding of the childhood unconscious is almost free of guilt.'
âWe have only Cohen to thank,' said Gilheeny, âfor teaching the technique of the free association.'
âCohen and that master of the Jewish race, Freud. And we have high hopes for you, Roy, for like a racehorse, your track record is among the best.'
âYou are a man who looks great on paper,' twitched Gilheeny, âhumane yet athletic. The Rhodes will of 1903 says, I do believe, to choose “the best men for the world's fight,” does it not?'
We were interrupted by a shriek from the Grenade Room:
GO AVAY GO AVAY GO AVAY . . .
My heart sank. A room-116 gomere. Even to put on the semblance of a BUFF before TURFING upstairs was, at that point, too much.
â“Do not presume,”' said Gilheeny, â“one of the thieves was killed; do not despair, one of the thieves was saved.”'
âAugustine, of course,' said Quick.
âWhere the hell did you learn that?' I blurted out, without thinking, and then blushed at the implication that these policemen were just two dumb lunky Irishmen.
âOur source for this was a remarkable firebrand of a minuscule Jew. A veritable Herzl,' said Gilheeny, ignoring my rudeness.
âHis name will be familiar, it is inscribed in the hearts of all, and above the lintel of room 116, the room named after him.'
âGrenade Room Dubler?' I asked.
âThe complete intern. Dubler knew all the fundamentals and tricky shortcuts that made him a medical wizard. Without question, in our knowledge of twenty years in God's House, Dubler was the best.'
âWell, I'd like to hear about him, but I've got to see that gomere,' I said, picking up my bag to go, yet wanting to hear more about this enticing and eccentric Dubler.
âNo need, man,' said Gilheeny, putting a fat hand on mine, âno need. We all know herâIna Goober, an archetype, and we have already put on as much of a BUFF as we could. She is with your pal Chuck at this very moment.'
âYou treated her?' I asked in some amazement.
âShe is beyond treatment. She needs nothing but a new nursing-home bed, as hers has been sold. There is no need for you to see her, for she is virtually on her elevator ride up.'
They were right. Chuck came out of room 116, put his bag down on the desk, and said, âHey, Roy, how you doin'? Great case, eh?'
âTerrific. How'd it go with her?'
âJust great. She thought I was Jackson, the black tern she had last year. Not only that, she sees LeRoy in Outpatient Clinic, and she thinks I'm him too.'
âLeRoy is another person of the black skin color?' asked Quick.
âNo foolin'. So she has us all, and she gets us all confused. That's OK man, âcause I never did meet a gomer who could tell two black doctors apart. You know how it is. So long. An' be a WALL.'
âBefore we hit the beat tonight,' said Gilheeny, âthere is time to tell one further story of Grenade Room Dubler. After making ties of axial friendship with us, in repayment for the transfer of knowledge from his brain to ours on an encyclopedic range of subjects, Quick and myself offered to educate your man Dubler in the more pornographic side of our beat. He became excited in the sexual anticipation, and one night we picked him up at midnight at these very doors, telling him that we had arranged for him to do all manner of dirty things with a “woman of the night,” if you get my meaning?'
âThe great Gilheeny was at the wheel, and I was in the shotgun seat,' said Quick, âand Dubler in the back, when in the area called the Strip, amidst the sailors and the seamen, we stopped the car and let an acquaintance of ours, one Lulu, jump into the back seat with Dubler. Lulu was the epitome of hot sex and cheap thrills.'
âInstructing Dubler beforehand that he could do anything he wanted with Lulu and that the rearview mirror was not to be used by us, we turned on the radio and drove randomly about, our eyeballs blinking back at the bright lights.'
âDubler and Lulu began to go at it,' said Quick. âHis hand went to a breast, which responded in banner fashion. After much hesitation, the New Jersey Grenade bolstered up the courage to slip a hot hand up under a high skirt. Up and up and up the thigh it went, as we watched in the rearview mirror.'
âSuddenly it hit something hard,' said Gilheeny, âhard and long, in the shape of an erect male organ of the XY-chromosome species.'
âThere was a sharp explosion from the little Grenade. We stopped the car, Lulu jumped out one side, Dubler out the other. It was days before we could cease to do the only human thing, laugh.'
âDubler forgave us, but slowly.'
âAnd only after we suggested that this had been part of our education of him, since we are, in some sense, textbooks, of a different sort, in ourselves.'
âFor what is learning if not the exchange of ideas?' asked the redhead cheerily. âNow we must go. For your willing ear and prospectus of what you might teach us, we will make sure, on your eight-hour shift, that we take all drunks, accidents, gunshots, and abusive hookers away from the House of God and across town to the E.W. at Man's Best Hospital, MBH. You should have an easy night, and good night.'
âWhy do you hang out here instead of at the MBH?' I asked. âAnd why are you being so nice to me?'
âMan's Best Hospital is not a friendly place. It is filled with overachievers lacking in the human quality of humor. In an instant it would commit a Crazy Abe. As a Jew, you know it is filled with red-hot and serious Gentiles. As Catholic policemen, we know it is filled with red-hot and serious Protestants. The odd Jewish tern there is a discredit to his roots. We know, for example, that Grenade Room Dubler, as well as yourself, were rejected by MBH for internship slots, in spite of your highest qualities on paper and in the flesh, and each rejected because of your “attitude.”'