The Class (59 page)

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Authors: Erich Segal

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Coming of Age

BOOK: The Class
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step toward achieving an honorable peace. Any comments?" Many speakers had deep misgivings about this potential escalation.

Though she was by far the most junior person present, Catherine Fitzgerald bravely raised her hand. "With due respect, I think if the government goes ahead with this invasion, every campus in America will explode." Kissinger answered her calmly. "Our decision must not be

 

 

 

swayed by a group of rootless, self-indulgent adolescents with no sense of political realities."

Catherine could not stop herself from responding, "Isn't that a bit harsh, Dr. Kissinger?"

"Perhaps that was an overgeneralization. I beg your pardon, Miss Fitzgerald."

The debate grew more heated and even less conclusive.

 

 

"I'm glad you called Henry on that antistudent remark," George said, as they were sharing a bottle of white wine in her apartment that evening. "But I think if you weren't so pretty you wouldn't have gotten away with it."

She brushed off the compliment and remarked, "You were certainly quiet today." -

"I don't think~I had anything to add," he replied evasively. "Besides, everybody knows where I stand."

"Yes. Right behind Kissinger. The point is, where does he stand?"

"I don't know," George lied.

 

 

Though the President did not announce it officially till the evening of April 30, the National Security Council was informed of the U.S. invasion of Cambodia on April 28. There was outrage among some of the members, who realized that the entire debate on Sunday had been nothing but a

charade. Several senior members stormed into Henry's office and immediately resigned.

But the disaffection was even more widespread among the younger aides, some of whom cut off promising government careers to quit in protest.

Catherine Fitzgerald was among the first to leave. And after delivering a strongly worded letter to one of Kissinger's secretaries, she marched ten paces down the corridor to the office of George Keller.

"You bastard!" she exploded before he had even shut the door. "You ruthless, heartless bastard! You have no respect

for anything or anyone. You and that Svengali of yours trifle with human lives-" -

"Cathy, please calm down-"

"No, let me finish, George. Because today I'm walking out of the White House and out of your life."

"Cathy, be reasonable. I'm not responsible-"

 

 

 

"But you knew! You knew. and you didn't even trust me enough to tell me."

"Well, I was right, judging by this hysterical reaction," George countered. -

"It isn't hysterical-dammit. It's human. In all your great assimilation of English words, George, did you ever really learn the meaning of that word?"

Before he could reply, she disappeared.

He sat motionless at his desk for several minutes, mulling over what had happened.

I suppose it was inevitable, he rationalized. Anyway, we couldn't have gone on much longer fighting our own private war.

Maybe Henry's right. *omen should only be- a hobby.

 

 

Six days later, after four students were killed at Kent State University in a protest demonstration, a taxi driver appeared at George Keller's home, bearing a battered suitcase. Inside he found a pile of shirts, ties, and other clothes that

he had left at Cathy's place. There was also a page onto

which she had neatly pasted newspaper photographs of the four victims.

Her message was simple and direct: "These are your children, Dr. Keller."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I

f Alice found her Wonderland by entering the looking glass, Ted Lambros - first spied his as he was peering

through the dusty windows of a British Rail carriage as it slowed down just before Oxford station.

On that same chilly autumn day, Cameron Wylie took the

Lambros trio on a walking tour of a university which had been conducting classes more than three full centuries before Columbus found America. Some of the original colleges,

like

-Merton and St. Edmund's Hall, still had portions from the late 1260s. And there was also a vestige of the Middle

Ages in

Exeter, Oriel, and "New" College.

Magdalen, a relative newcomer from the fifteenth century, was Oxford's jewel, with its exquisite gardens bordering the river Cherwell. It even had a deer park, which made little Ted feel like he was in a fairy tale.

And finally, Christ Church, dominated by the huge

octagonal Tom Tower built by Christopher Wren (an imitation of which adorned Harvard's Dunster House). This was Wylie's college, where he had arranged temporary Common Room privileges for Ted.

"What do you think, kiddo?" Ted asked his son, as they stood in the Great Quadrangle.

"It's all so old, Daddy."

"That's the best atmosphere for getting new ideas," Sara commented.

"Quite right," said the Regius Professor.

They then proceeded in his Morris Minor to the small terraced house in Addison Crescent that was to be their lodgings for the year. -

Confronted with the fading greens and browns and tired furniture, the only comment Sara could manage was, "Oh, Professor Wylie, it's so quaint."

"All credit to my wife," he answered gallantly. "Heather tracked it down. You have no notion of how grotty so many flats are here in Oxford. She's filled the fridge with some basics, just to tide you over till she drops in tomorrow morning. Now I must take my leave, I've got a pile of galleys to correct."

 

 

Sara cooked eggs and sausages for dinner, sang young Ted to sleep, and then descended to the sitting room.

"It's cold as hell in here," she commented. -

"All three of these electric bars are blazing," Ted replied and pointed to the orange-glowing fireplace.

"That looks like a dilapidated toaster." Sara frowned.

"And it's just about as warm."

"Come on, honey," Ted cajoled, "where's your sense of adventure?"

"Frozen," Sara answered, as she opened up the sherry Mrs. Wylie had thoughtfully provided for them, "Couldn't Heather have found us someplace that had central heating?"

"Hey look," Ted reasoned, "I'll grant this isn't

Buckingham Palace, but it's only a couple of minutes from Teddie's school, and we can walk right into town." And then he noticed.

 

 

 

"Hey, why have you got your hat and gloves on? Are you going somewhere?"

"Yeah. To bed. I'm not a polar bear."

 

 

The next morning Ted met Wylie at the entrance to the Bodleian and the professor introduced him to an elderly librarian who then made Ted recite the ancient "Readers' Oath" aloud.

"I hereby undertake not to remove from the Library, or to mark, deface, or injure in any way, any volume, document, or other object belonging to it or in its custody; not to bring into the Library or kindle therein any fire or flame

Of course, no books could be borrowed from this hallowed repository. Even Oliver Cromwell himself, when he was ruler of the land, was not allowed this privilege.

So for most of his daily work Ted used the collection at the Ashmolean Museum. Here each morning he would pass imposing Greek statuary on his way to the stuffy room that housed the classics of the classics-and indeed some of the men who'd written them.

One afternoon that first week he bought himself a Christ Church scarf on Broad Street, He wanted to be just as Oxonian, or more, as anyone in Oxford.

Several times a week he lunched in College with Cameron- they were now on a first-name basis. Here he met not only scholars in his field but luminaries from the other disciplines as well. -

It was soon clear to all the classicists from other colleges that this young American was Wylie's special

protégé. And, therefore, on the evening of Ted's lecture to the Philological Society, they came ready to attack.

The talk was splendid. By far the best he'd ever given.

And Wylie leapt to his feet and trumpeted, "I think that the Society has just heard a most distinguished presentation. And if Professor Lambros is not too fatigued, perhaps he'd entertain one or two questions."

- - Four hands shot up, all brandishing invisible knives, The "inquiries" were really probes to see if Ted had substance as a scholar. But, like Horatius at the bridge, he staunchly held them - off, decapitating Tarquin after Tarquin.

And with it all he never lost his winsome smile.

The warm applause was but a tiny index of his victory. For nearly every don attending waited patiently to shake his hand- and offer invitations to have lunch with them. Several hours later, Ted and Sara were walking homeward, arm in arm, intoxicated by his triumph.

"Onoma tou Theou," she rhapsodized in loving imitation of his mother. "You were unbelievable. I wish the guys at Harvard could have heard you here tonight."

"Don't worry," Ted replied, with newly bolstered

self-assurance, "they'll hear about it soon enough."

 

 

By January, when Hilary term began, Ted Lambros was almost a fixture on the Oxford scene. So much so that the head of the University Press always tried to sit near him at High Table, to win his next book for OUP.

Wylie, who was himself revising the Oxford edition of Euripides, offered a special seminar for graduates as well as postgraduates on the Alcestis. And he asked Ted to

collaborate with him.

In retrospect, there was an element of irony in the choice of play. For Euripides' heroine nobly sacrifices herself to save her husband, and thereby perpetuates their marriage. Whereas the seminar itself led to the death knell of Ted's relationship with Sara.

Perhaps it was inevitable. For his great success at Oxford had aroused in him a wild cerebral ecstasy. He felt intellectually priapic.

The object of his affection-or, as he unconsciously considered it, the prize for his achievements-was an

auburn-haired, nineteen-year-old undergraduate named Felicity

Hendon.

Two things made her conspicuous at the seminar.- First,

her splendid command of Greek, which was exceptional even by Oxford's high standards. And then her body, whose slender sensuality was noticeable even beneath her loosely

flowing-and short-academic gown. Ted had difficulty taking his eyes off her legs.

Felicity had come to Oxford to make intimate acquaintance with the noblest minds. In truth, her initial reason for taking the seminar was to attempt to seduce the Regius Professor himself.

Yet, there was Ted. An academic old enough to qualify as

"senior" in her estimation, but who still possessed what she acknowledged as the vestiges of youthful vigor.

 

 

 

- And with it all, Ted thought he was seducing her. The whole adventure started with an unpretentious

gathering to which Felicity and Jane, her roommate, asked the nine students and two teachers from the seminar. Like almost every Oxford invitation, it implicitly excluded wives.

Sara had grown used to this inequity, though she continued

to resent it. She knew Ted enjoyed visiting those High Tables at the -different colleges. Especially when they were

black-tie evenings. He, who once would cringe at fastening

his bow tie to go out and wait on tables, now was thrilled to don the very same cravat to go to academic dinners with his penguin-suited fellow Fellows.

And Sara did derive some pleasure from the fact that Ted

was having fun. Besides, she knew he would reciprocate next year when they returned to Canterbury and she started working for a doctorate at Harvard.

 

 

Though students at St. Hilda's College, the two girls

lived in a small rented flat on Gresham Road. That February evening the festivities began with cheap white wine, then changed to even cheaper red to grace the execrable food the hostesses imagined was a gourmet meal.

Cameron was the first to leave. His relationship with

Heather was notorious in Oxford. They were most unfashionably faithful to each other. And so he always departed for home as early as good manners would allow. The students disappeared by casual attrition-for studies, assignations, pot, or simply

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