Infinite Jest (24 page)

Read Infinite Jest Online

Authors: David Foster Wallace

BOOK: Infinite Jest
4.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘He bails, right,’ Chu says. He refers to index cards. Wayne’s head makes the door
rattle slightly. Chu says, ‘Then you’ve got your Obsessive type, J.W. says, so eager
to plateau-hop he doesn’t even know the word
patient
, much less
humble
or
slog
, when he gets stalled at a plateau he tries to like
will
and
force
himself off it, by sheer force of work and drill and will and practice, drilling
and obsessively honing and working more and more, as in frantically, and he overdoes
it and gets hurt, and pretty soon he’s all chronically messed up with injuries, and
he hobbles around on the court still obsessively overworking, until finally he’s hardly
even able to walk or swing, and his ranking plummets, until finally one
P.M.
there’s a little knock on his door and it’s deLint, here for a little chat about
your progress here at E.T.A.’

‘Banzai! El Bailo!
See
ya!’

‘Then what John considers maybe the worst type, because it can cunningly masquerade
as patience and humble frustration. You’ve got the Complacent type, who improves radically
until he hits a plateau, and is content with the radical improvement he’s made to
get to the plateau, and doesn’t mind staying at the plateau because it’s comfortable
and familiar, and he doesn’t worry about getting off it, and pretty soon you find
he’s designed a whole game around compensating for the weaknesses and chinks in the
armor the given plateau represents in his game, still—his whole game is based on this
plateau now. And little by little, guys he used to beat start beating him, locating
the chinks of the plateau, and his rank starts to slide, but he’ll say he doesn’t
care, he says he’s in it for the love of the game, and he always smiles but there
gets to be something sort of tight and hangdog about his smile, and he always smiles
and is real nice to everybody and real good to have around but he keeps staying where
he is while other guys hop plateaux, and he gets beat more and more, but he’s content.
Until one day there’s a quiet knock at the door.’

‘It’s DeLint!’

‘A quiet chat!’

‘Geronzai!’

Van Vleck looks up at Wayne, who’s now turned away with his hands against the door
frame, shoving, one leg back, stretching the right calf. ‘This is your advice, Mr.
Wayne sir? This isn’t Chu palming himself off as you again?’

They all want to know how Wayne does it, #2 continentally in 18’s at just seventeen,
and very likely #1 after the WhataBurger and already getting calls from ProServ agents
Tavis has Lateral Alice Moore screen. Wayne’s the most sought-after Big Buddy at E.T.A.
You have to apply for Wayne as Buddy by random drawing.

LaMont Chu and T. P. Peterson are sending van Vleck optical daggers as Wayne turns
around to stretch a hip-flexor and says he’s said pretty much all he has to say.

‘Todder, I admire your savvy, I admire a kid’s certain worldly skepticism, no matter
how misplaced it is here. So even though it fucks me on the odds, so there’s now like
practically no way I can come out square,’ M. Pemulis says in V.R.2, subdorm C, sitting
on the very edge of the divan with a few feet of beige shag between him and his four
kids, all cross-legged on cushions; he says, ‘I’ll reward your worldly skepticism
this once by letting you try it with only two, so like I’ve got just two cards here,
and I hold them up, one in each hand….’ He stops abruptly, knocks his temple with
the heel of a hand that holds a Jack. ‘Whoa, what am I thinking. We all gotta put
in our fiveski here first.’

Otis P. Lord clears his throat: ‘The ante.’

‘Or it’s called the pot,’ says Todd Possalthwaite, laying a five on the little pile.

‘Jaysus I’m thinking, sweet Jaysus what am I getting into with these kids that speak
the lingo like veteran Jersey-shore croupiers. I got to be missing a widget or something.
’t the fuck, though, you know what I’m saying? So Todd man you choose just one of
the cards, we got the clubby Jack and the spade Queen here, and you choose… and so
down they go both of them face-down, and I like swirl them around on the floor a little,
not shuffle but swirl so they’re in plain view the whole time, and you follllllowwwwwwww
the card you chose, around and around, which like with three cards maybe I’ve got
some chance you lose track but with two? With just
two?

Ted Schacht in V.R.3 at his giant plasticene oral demonstrator, the huge dental mock-up,
white planks of teeth and obscene pink gums, twine-size floss anchored around both
wrists:

‘The vital thing here gentlemen being not the force or how often you rotate to particulate-free
floss but the
motion
, see, a soft sawing motion, gently up and down both ancipitals of the enamel’—demonstrating
down the side of a bicuspid big as the kids’ heads, the plasticene gum-stuff yielding
with sick sucking sounds, Schacht’s five kids all either glazed-looking or glued to
their watch’s second-hand—‘and then here’s the key,
here’s
the thing so few people understand:
down
below the ostensible gumline into the basal recessions at either side of the gingival
mound that obtrudes between the teeth, down
below
, where your most pernicious particulates hide and breed.’

Troeltsch holds court in his, Pemulis and Schacht’s room in Subdorm C, supinely upright
against both of his and one of Schacht’s pillows, the vaporizer chugging, one of his
kids holding Kleenex at the ready.

‘Boys, what it is is I’ll tell you it’s repetition. First last always. It’s hearing
the same motivational stuff over and over till sheer repetitive weight makes it sink
down into the gut. It’s making the same pivots and lunges and strokes over and over
and over again, at you boys’s age it’s reps for their own sake, putting results on
the back burner, why they never give anybody the boot for insufficient progress under
fourteen, it’s repetitive movements and motions for their own sake, over and over
until the accretive weight of the reps sinks the movements themselves down under your
like consciousness into the more nether regions, through repetition they sink and
soak into the hardware, the C.P.S. The machine-language. The autonomical part that
makes you breathe and sweat. It’s no accident they say you Eat, Sleep, Breathe tennis
here. These are autonomical. Accretive means accumulating, through sheer mindless
repeated motions. The machine-language of the muscles. Until you can do it without
thinking about it, play. At like fourteen, give and take, they figure here. Just do
it. Forget about is there a point, of course there’s no point. The point of repetition
is there is no point. Wait until it soaks into the hardware and then see the way this
frees up your head. A whole shitload of head-space you don’t need for the mechanics
anymore, after they’ve sunk in. Now the mechanics are wired in. Hardwired in. This
frees the head in the remarkablest ways. Just wait. You start thinking a whole different
way now, playing. The court might as well be inside you. The ball stops being a ball.
The ball starts being something that you just know
ought
to be in the air, spinning. This is when they start getting on you about concentration.
Right now of course you have to concentrate, there’s no choice, it’s not wired down
into the language yet, you have to think about it every time you do it. But wait till
fourteen or fifteen. Then they see you as being at one of the like crucial plateaus.
Fifteen, tops. Then the concentration and character shit starts. Then they really
come after you. This is the crucial plateau where character starts to matter. Focus,
self-consciousness, the chattering head, the cackling voices, the choking-issue, fear
versus whatever isn’t fear, self-image, doubts, reluctances, little tight-lipped cold-footed
men inside your mind, cackling about fear and doubt, chinks in the mental armor. Now
these start to matter. Thirteen at the earliest. Staff looks at a range of thirteen
to fifteen. Also the age of manhood-rituals in various cultures. Think about it. Until
then, repetition. Until then you might as well be machines, here, is their view. You’re
just going through the motions. Think about the phrase: Going Through The Motions.
Wiring them into the motherboard. You guys don’t know how good you’ve got it right
now.’

James Albrecht Lockley Struck Jr. of Orinda CA prefers one long Q&A-type interface,
with V.R.8’s viewer playing ambient stuff against relaxation-vistas of surf, shimmering
ponds, fields of nodding wheat.

‘Time for about maybe two more, me droogies.’

‘Say it’s close and the guy starts kertwanging you. Balls are way in and he’s calling
them out. You can’t believe the flagrancy of it.’

‘Implicit this is a no-linesman situation, Traub, you’re saying.’

Creepily-blue-eyed Audern Tallat-Kelpsa chimes in: ‘This is early rounds. The kind
they give you only two balls. Honor systems. All of a sudden there he is kertwanging
on you. It happens.’

‘I know it happens.’

Traub says, ‘Whether he’s outright kertwanging or just head-fucking you. Do you start
kertwanging back? Tit for tat? What do you do?’

‘Do we assume there’s a crowd.’

‘Early round. Remote court. No witnesses. You’re on your own out there. Do you kertwang
back.’

‘You do not kertwang back. You play the calls, not a word, keep smiling. If you still
win, you’ll have grown inside as a person.’

‘If you lose?’

‘If you lose, you do something private and unpleasant to his water-jug right before
his next round.’

A couple of the kids have notebooks and studious nods. Struck is a prized tactician,
very formal in B.B. group-sessions, something scholarly and detached about him his
charges often revere.

‘We can discuss private water-jug unpleasantness on Friday,’ Struck says, looking
at his watch.

A hand raised by the violently cross-eyed Carl Whale, age thirteen. Acknowledgment
from Struck.

‘Say you have to fart.’

‘You’re serious, Mobes, aren’t you.’

‘Jim sir, say you’re playing out there, and suddenly you have to fart. It feels like
one of those real hot nasty pressurized ones.’

‘I get the picture.’

Now some empathic murmurs, exchanged looks. Josh Gopnik is nodding very intensely.
Struck stands very straight to the right of the viewer, hands behind his back like
an Oxford don.

‘I mean the kind that’s real urgent.’ Whale looks briefly around him. ‘But that it’s
not impossible it’s actually a need to go to the bathroom, instead, masquerading as
a fart.’

Now five heads are nodding, pained, urgent: clearly a vexing sub-14 issue. Struck
examines a cuticle.

‘Meaning defecate is what you mean, then, Mobes. Go to the bathroom.’

Gopnik looks up. ‘Carl’s saying the kind where you don’t know what to do. What if
you think you have to fart but it’s really that you have to shit?’

‘As in it’s a competitive situation, it’s not a situation where you can go bearing
down and forcing and see what happens.’

‘So out of caution you don’t,’ Gopnik says.

‘—fart,’ Philip Traub says.

‘But then you’ve denied yourself an urgent fart, and you’re running around trying
to compete with a terrible hot nasty uncomfortable fart riding around the court inside
you.’

Two levels down, Ortho Stice and his brood: the little libraryish circle of soft chairs
and lamps in the warm foyer off the front door to subdorm C:

‘And what he says he says it’s about more than tennis, mein kinder.
Mein kinder
, well it sort of means my family. He eyeballs me right square in the eye and says
it’s about how to reach down into parts of yourself you didn’t know were there and
get down in there and live inside these parts. And the only way to get to them: sacrifice.
Suffer. Deny. What are you willing to give. You’ll hear him ask it if you’re privileged
to ever get an interface. The call could come at anytime: the man wants a mano-to-mano
interface. You’ll hear him say it over and over. What have you got to give. What are
you willing to part with. I see you’re looking a little pale there, Wagenknecht. Is
this scary you bet your little pink personal asses it’s scary. It’s the big time.
He’ll tell you straight the fuck out. It’s about discipline and sacrifice and honor
to something way bigger than your personal ass. He’ll mention America. He’ll talk
patriotism and don’t think he won’t. He’ll talk about it’s patriotic play that’s the
high road to the thing. He’s not American but I tell you straight out right here he
makes me proud to be American. Mein kinder. He’ll say it’s how to learn to be a good
American during a time, boys, when America isn’t good its own self.’

There’s a long pause. The front door is newer than the wood around it. ‘I’d chew fiberglass
for that old man.’

The only reason the Buddies in V.R.8 can hear the little burst of applause from the
foyer is because Struck won’t hesitate to pause and consider silently as long as he
has to. To the kids the pauses spell dignity and integrity and the still-water depth
of a guy with nine years in at three different academies, and who has to shave daily.
He exhales a slow breath through rounded lips, looking off up at the ceiling’s guilloche
border.

‘Mobes, if it’s me: I let it ride.’

‘You let it out come what may?’

‘A la contraire. I let it ride around inside all day if I have to. I make an iron
rule: nothing escapes my bottom during play. Not a toot or a whistle. If I play hunched
over I play hunched over. I take the discomfort in the name of dignified caution,
and when it’s especially bad I look up at sky between points and I say to the sky
Thank You Sir may I have another. Thank You Sir may I have another.’

Gopnik and Tallat-Kelpsa are writing this down.

Struck says, ‘That’s if I want to hang for the long haul.’


One
side of the gingival mound, then up over the apex and down over the
other
side of the gingival mound, using you should cultivate a certain amount of touch
with the string.’

Other books

The Damaged One by Mimi Harper
Mud Girl by Alison Acheson
Bad Kitty by Debra Glass
Tell No One Who You Are by Walter Buchignani
My Brother Michael by Mary Stewart
Roma Invicta by Javier Negrete
Rebirth by Sophie Littlefield
Escape with the Dream Maker by Gilbert L. Morris
21 Blackjack by Ben Mezrich