Vital Parts

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Authors: Thomas Berger

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PRAISE FOR
VITAL PARTS

“Berger … covers ground like a hiccoughing tank and somehow manages to hit just about everything—hard, hilariously and with malicious intent.” —
Kirkus Reviews
, starred review

“Massively humorous and immensely mature … It reads like some kind of masterpiece.” —
Harper's Magazine

“A wonderfully generous novel.” —
The New York Times

“Confirms Berger's rank as a major American novelist, one whose stylistic fecundity, psychological insight, and social knowledge are seemingly inexhaustible.” —
Saturday Review

“Worth a dozen solid tomes on our scrambled American culture—youth, black, counter, square—because its wit is proportionate to its conception and its extravagant imagination to its unswerving common sense.” —Award-winning author Robert Gorham Davis

“Under the cold, correct surface of his prose—which, employed to render absurdity, creates the fundamental tension of his work—lies one of the most genuinely radical sensibilities now writing novels in this country.” —
Commentary

Vital Parts

A Novel

Thomas Berger

To my friend and publisher
,

Richard W. Baron

1

Reinhart unwrapped himself from the terry-cloth robe and hung it on the back of the bathroom door by means of the embroidered label (
BIGGIE'S, FOR A LOT O' GUY
, trademark of a mailorder house specializing in the needs of the outsized), so obliterating the fun-house image of his gross nudity in the full-length mirror thereupon.

He padded to the toilet, planted his great hams on the turquoise cozy which covered the lid, supported his chins in his palms, and proceeded to review certain events of the day, beginning with the lunch-hour incident in the men's room of Gino's Restaurant.

Standing at one of the porcelain receptacles, he had read, on the wall just above the chromium flush-button, a ball-penned exhortation:
MAKE LOVE NOT WAR AND MAKE IT WITH ME
, signed “Chuck.” “P. S. If you're interested, leave your number.”

Reinhart had glanced in a nervous circuit and seen only some matter-of-fact gent running a faucet over his glasses, shaking off the excess, and applying paper towel for the final polish. Having fitted the black plastic temple pieces, wide as tongue depressors, onto his ears, the stranger gave Reinhart a keen, stern look. Reinhart decided to punch him in the mouth if he turned out to be an importunate “Chuck.” But what if the guy was in turn entertaining suspicions of Reinhart?

The eyeglassed man caught himself in the act of leaving, and halfway through the door threw his head back at an odd angle and asked: “Don't we know one another?”

Oh-oh
, Reinhart thought instantly, being trapped by his preparations,
here it comes
, yet found, self-hatefully, that far from assuming a hostile righteousness, he felt weak and guilty.

The putative fag took two backward steps, clearing the doorway. “Sure,” said he, “you're Reinhart. Bob Sweet: we went to high school together.”

After a couple of drinks Sweet insisted on buying him lunch. Reinhart had eaten no breakfast. He was a sporadic weight-watcher, and took advantage of opportunities that came his way, such as bottom-of-the-morning nausea. He was soon drunk on two Bloody Marys. Staring at Sweet's smooth countenance he remembered the acne of school days. No trace of it remained, yet time was, Sweet had been famous for his pimples. Reinhart fell unbearably sad, and ordered another gore-colored drink. Sweet was talking of business. Reinhart had long since seen his youthful dream of a synthesis of commerce and culture go down the same drain as his build. Sweet was apparently a successful moneymaker, had a trim figure, and would have choked on his porterhouse at an allusion to the
Divine Comedy
. Which in fact Reinhart himself had not looked into in the more than twenty years since leaving college. Yet neither was Reinhart solvent. So if laugh there was, it wasn't on Sweet.

Sweet said: “It's just by chance you find me here today.” As if Reinhart had been looking for him; yet that was the style of the successful businessman. “It's sheer luck,” Sweet went on. “Choked carb on my Comanche. Otherwise I would have been lunching in New York.” Then, correctly suspecting Reinhart did not get his drift, he said: “My airplane.”

“Yes,” Reinhart thickly replied. “The congestion at our airports is deplorable. Sometimes you are in a holding pattern for longer than the flight took.”

“No.” Sweet pointed with the bloodstained tip of his steak knife. “You haven't got the picture. I'm not talking about the commercial carriers. I own my own aircraft.”

“You
are
doing well,” said Reinhart. “Your own plane.”

“Excuse me,” Sweet said. “It's always ‘airplane' or ‘aircraft.' Listen to the pilot next time you're up.”

For some reason the correction stung Reinhart, though it was understandable that any art or craft had its own jargon. And Sweet, whose businessman's radar was tuned to detect the surface emotions of any vis-à-vis while his own features maintained a strategic, seemingly oblivious confidence, moved quickly to assuage the smart: “Nothing personal.”

It was just the wrong thing to say, though in fact Reinhart appreciated the sentiment behind it. He certainly would not have preferred that Sweet be inconsiderate. Yet Sweet's very exercise of what might be termed a polite delicacy succeeded in reminding Reinhart of a much more serious matter than the discrepancy between Sweet's worldly achievements and his own.

Glowering over the crust of his chicken potpie, from the starter-hole in which a pea peeped at him like a frog's protuberant eye, he said: “Sweetie,” the old school name coming involuntarily to his lips, “Sweetie, I tell you this. There isn't anything that isn't personal.”

“My God,” said Sweet, “nobody's called me that in years. We're getting old, Reinhart.”

Reinhart blinded the imaginary batrachian with his fork and got a bit of alleged chicken as well, carried it to the hopper of his mouth, dumped it there, chewed, and swallowed this needless reminder that Gino's really wasn't big on anything but steak, and that happened to be too tough for Reinhart's removable bridge.

Reinhart's memory of Sweetie now came along in detail, dragged along, as it were, by the name. Not only had Sweet held the class championship in acne, and thus was popularly accused of being a fanatical masturbator, but Sandy O'Connell, a smaller boy, had in some altercation at a water fountain struck him in the chest and Sweetie, who must have been about fourteen, bent over and sobbed like a girl. After that he was for years the frequent target of feints to the sternal region, though certainly not by Reinhart, in whom physical victims always incited more disgust than sadism. If he had been asked, Well, what's a frail guy to do, he would have answered, Build yourself up, as I did. Those were the days when Reinhart never questioned the American principle of self-improvement, for the simple reason that it worked for him. Get yourself a set of barbells from York, Pennsylvania, use them regularly, and in several years you can be a monolith of muscle. Then take no exercise for several decades and let the heat of life melt you into a lump of fat.

“Excuse me?” Sweet was asking. Reinhart gathered from this that “Reinhart” had said something aloud, as he was wont to do when drink separated the selves. At neighborhood parties “Reinhart” had been known to wander out to the kitchen and fondle the hostess' behind, while Reinhart sat quietly in the corner of the living-room sofa wearing a thin, supercilious smile which distinguished him from the surrounding drones who talked of lawns and baseball, or, if the other sex, offspring, vacation prospects, and national figures who appalled them.

“I was pursuing a train of thought,” he said now to Sweet, a portmanteau phrase he had heard in some English movie once and since carried for this kind of occasion, which was far from infrequent.

“Acne,” said Sweet. “You said the word ‘acne.' You were thinking of me as a kid.” He lifted a piece of steak and feinted at Reinhart with its striated redness. “No, don't apologize. I don't mind in the least. I'll go you one better: I was the most wretched youth the world has ever known. I couldn't bear to look in a mirror. And I was yellow as a lemon. You remember how you and the other guys used to beat me up.”

Reinhart protested. “I never touched you.” Nor had anyone else except Sandy O'Connell, unless it was in private and that would have been utterly out of character for those schoolboys, for whom harassment of a weakling was exclusively the theme for public demonstrations and not therefore serious.

“Listen,” Sweet cried jovially, “you don't forget those things if you're on the receiving end.” He vigorously toothed his morsel of meat with excellent white choppers that were obviously his own. “But have no fear I want to settle accounts at this late date.” Saying this, he was host to another emotion than bonhomie, and his eyes flickered across Reinhart's scalp, which after all these years was yet crew-cut, but thick, by God thick still, that was one thing he had not lost, and because he had been fair the gradual graying had not upset the balance of color.

Reinhart gave him a halfhearted hard look. “Think you could take me now?”

Sweet turned genial again. “You could jail me if I laid a finger on you. I come under the law's provision for prizefighters. I won my black belt last year in kung fu.”

Reinhart nodded and finished his third Bloody Mary, no longer tasting the Tabasco sauce as such; it seemed pure sulfuric acid.

“That's a Chinese school of karate,” Sweet explained, “outlawed in some places. Your body is a lethal weapon.” He showed Reinhart a hand. “This will disintegrate a brick.”

Reinhart leaned forward to inspect it, and caught himself with his own soft paws lest he keep going for a faceful of potpie. “I don't see a ridge of callus.”

Sweet snorted. “TV stuff! Built up with putty on pansy actors. My master has hands like a woman, yet can break five one-inch boards simultaneously with his thumb.”

“Listen, Sweet,” Reinhart said loudly, and then broke into a huge, idiotic grin. He was dimly conscious that nearby diners, attracted by the noise, now turned away at this facial show of harmlessness. They would, however, soon know revulsion when he rose and vomited on the floor. Thus he would have evoked from utter strangers three distinct emotions. He still had a certain power, if mean and within the reach of any stray dog. The thought encouraged him to hang in there a while yet and milk his wretchedness for Sweetie alone.

“Listen,” he repeated, “and I must admit I don't recall your first name. I can't keep saying Sweetie because you don't have acne any more and you are rich and tough and own your own airplane—”

“Bob,” said Sweet, who sat stanchly concrete behind a swirling screen of Reinhart's sudden doubts that this colloquy was real.

“Mine's Carl now, though my parents named me Carlo, but my wife, whom you might remember as Genevieve Raven, she's younger than us and never lived here when small but worked for Claude Humbold, the realtor, after the war, she never liked the name Carlo, said it sounded queer …”

“OK, Carl,” Sweet said, grinning derisively. There was a time when Reinhart could hold his liquor, could be drunk as a skunk and never let on, and friends would attest to this next day. Sweet, who had begun as a middle-aged anonymity in the men's room, looked younger and younger. He wore a uniform tan; his conspicuous glasses were stylish and did not signify infirmity. When Sweetie and Reinhart were young, specs gave a boy a pansy look. Reinhart had almost forgotten that. He kept coming back to the touchstone of his youth and rubbing things on it to see whether they were precious.

“Bob,” he said sloppily, “you don't have to pull that karotty stuff on me—”

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