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  “Not here; not anywhere.”

  “You telling me you never married?”

  “Correct.”

  “But you’ve lived with someone, right?”

  “No longer than a three-day weekend.”

  Gil shook his head. “Jesus. I know you’re not queer, not unless they got something in the water out there that turns the sex thing inside out, which come to think of it they should probably check out if they haven’t already.” Gil’s look turned crafty; the elbow in my rib was sharp. “I know someone who’ll be glad to learn you’re still roaming the range, cowboy.”

  My stomach fluttered, then folded, then soared. “Not Libby, I hope.”

  His grin turned demented. “Looks good enough to eat, too. It’s worth money if I can watch the good parts.”

  I tried to calm him down, although calm and Gil Hayward had ever been strangers. “I’m sure she brought a spouse along; she got married the year after we graduated.”

  Gil shook his head. “She’s between husbands two and three, and number three hasn’t put in an appearance yet. Her words exactly—you’re free to take your shot.”

  “Great.” My stomach opted for a second loop.

  “Come on,” Gil urged, slapping my back again. “Get the paperwork taken care of and follow me. We’re over in Milton, same floor as freshman year. Hartman is already there, trying to figure out how to open his suitcase. Got a car?”

  I nodded. “Rental.”

  “Good. We can cruise the strip if our classmates are as boring as they used to be. Remember the townies we picked up at the pizza place that time?”

  “I try not to.”

  “Come on, Tanner; they were good sports.”

  “They were pitiful; if it happened today, they’d call it date rape.”

  Gil clouded over the way Texas clouds over—with mounds of black and rumbles of thunder. Sudden violence had always been one of his trademarks, and I thought for a moment he was going to slug me. But the fists at his side soon melted and he settled for a dismissive epithet. “Just because they didn’t issue an invitation doesn’t mean they didn’t want it. Townies lived to fuck college guys.”

  “I seem to remember it took a long time to get yours to stop crying,” I said stiffly, then regretted it. That I hadn’t had sex with the girl I’d inherited that evening had more to do with being too drunk than too noble, and anyway the past was ineradicably past. Still, even if our behavior had been less unilateral than I’d suggested, the episode had been one of those excesses of youth that leave a splinter in your mind, something you hope never happens again, something you can’t believe you did.

  Something you need to atone for.

  “It seems weird to have a car up here,” I said on the way to the parking lot, referring to one of the numberless rules that, along with compulsory church on Sundays and coats and ties at dinner, had made the institution a comforting shawl of in loco parentis to the parents and a prickly anachronism to their children.

  “Yeah,” Gil groused, his enthusiasm already on the wane. “It would have almost been tolerable if we’d had wheels.”

  I opened the car for Gil, then tossed my jacket in the back and got in the driver’s side. Before starting the engine, I opened my packet of reunion materials and glanced through the schedule for the day. Although my perusal was only cursory, the entertainments seemed to begin with a sing-along in the new theater and climax with a dance in the old gym and conclude with a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous in the basement of the school chapel.

  I had a feeling things were going to stay at least that weird through the weekend.

  TWO

  The drive to the dormitory was brief—a drive to anyplace on campus was necessarily brief—but it took long enough to confirm an enduring impression: The grounds of my alma mater were among the loveliest spots on earth. Broad swaths of grass; mammoth oaks and elms and maples; majestic buildings; blooming gardens; hills and vales and lakes and streams. Inspiring, all of it, then and now, yet at the same time deceptive and perhaps beside the point.

  For one thing, it was summer, so the flora was on its most verdant behavior rather than curled in the scruffy somnolence it suffered during most of the academic term. Tempers had flared and moods had plummeted during those dull gray months of winter—loves were lost, friendships severed, studies neglected, often irretrievably. The tardy lift of spring never quite made up for it, not even the year the baseball team went 26 and 5 and Gil and I were named all-league.

  More troubling than the intemperate cycles of botany and meteorology was my sense—grounded in resentments I didn’t know I had until I boarded the flight that morning—that the attentions lavished on the grounds and buildings, as well as on the pursuits that pulsed within them, contrasted markedly with the neglect of more essential needs. Lack of guidance, or even notable concern, on matters ranging from career choice to social deftness to symptoms of personal dysfunction had left many of my peers, including myself, in a fog that led us down wrong roads. On the day I graduated and went out into the world, I knew more about the Renaissance than I knew about myself.

  But as part of me doled out blame, a larger part acknowledged that I wasn’t being fair. My own experience wasn’t the norm of the place, after all. Not a scholar, not possessed of a passion that provided clear direction in terms of career or avocation, not sure of who I was or what I wanted, I needed from external sources what most of my classmates found within. The urge to blame the college for the pedestrian course my life had taken was to credit it with more magic than it had or could possess. Nevertheless, I couldn’t help but wonder how my peers felt about the contours of their lives after the send-off the school provided—whether they saw themselves as predestined champions of a grand design, or, like me, as the illegitimate offspring of a random chance. For the time being, it was enough to acknowledge that the school was a lovely place, whose surfaces made you proud. What lurked behind the heroic stone facades and the sad small smiles of the faculty and staff was far more problematic.

  I parked the car and extracted my bag from the trunk and lugged it toward the checkin desk, with Gil leading the way like a tackle leading the fullback on a power sweep, which he had done for me in former times as well. Although most of the faces in the crowd were familiar in the sense the billboards along the freeway are familiar, I had trouble coming up with names to match. Scurrying like a squirrel, I made do with generic gestures of greeting that were reciprocated with equal languor. By the time I was in line for a key to my room, I decided my initial impulse had been apt—attendance was a big mistake that would only be compounded as the festivities began to snowball.

  I was already formulating a retreat when Seth Hartman materialized at my side, looking miraculously identical to the day we’d met and immediately become fast friends, which was the second day of freshman orientation when we noticed we were each reading Goodbye, Columbus as we waited to be photographed for the zoo book. In a reversal of mood of an amplitude that had been endemic in my student days, I was glad to be where I was again.

  “Hey, Marsh,” Seth said, his grin at once crooked and timid and genuine.

  I grinned a ton and shook his hand. “Whatever you’re taking will make you a fortune if you can sell it through the mail.”

  His blue eyes sparked with pleasure. “If you’re referring to my eternally youthful aspect, I ascribe it to a purity of heart and mind plus a jigger of Jack Daniel’s of an evening, to ward off the chill.”

  “I didn’t think it got below ninety in Charleston.”

  The grin made way for an aphorism. “Chills aren’t exclusively external. As I believe you know.”

  I looked to see if there was a message in there someplace, but the result was inconclusive. To all intents and purposes, Seth Hartman seemed unstruck by the sniper fire of time. His body was as lithe and fluid as ever, his hair still clipped to prep-school perfection, albeit with an edge of gray. His jaw was defined and strong, his skin taut and Southern-fried, his
attire a peerless blend of light linens and soft leathers. As I watched him accept the fellowship of others and dispense his easy and gracious responses, it was obvious that Seth remained fashionable and funny and bright and self-effacing, a star in spite of himself as he had been in the days when I’d basked unabashedly in his glory, which had been grounded not in what he had done but simply in who he was. It was not an exaggeration to say that my friendship with Seth Hartman was the most auspicious achievement of those four young years of my life.

  “It’s great to see you, Marsh,” Seth was saying.

  “You, too.”

  “I almost called when this reunion thing geared up. Got your number from Directory Assistance and everything, but couldn’t bring myself to dial the phone.”

  “I know what you mean,” I said, because I did. Seth and I had been pivotal to each other once, a reciprocal support system that boosted one and then the other over the bumps and thumps of maturation. I think one of the reasons we’d stayed apart ever since was the sense that whatever we became to each other now would only undermine that bond.

  “You’re still in San Francisco, right?”

  “Right.”

  “And still a … whatever you call it? Private eye seems so film noir.”

  “Well, that’s me. Noir to the core.”

  “We’ll have to talk about that sometime, how you got from lawyering to sleuthing.”

  “After we talk about why you traded New England for South Carolina. I’m no expert, but your accent sounds straight off the plantation. I’ll bet you named your firstborn Rhett.”

  A switch momentarily shut down the mechanics of his face—the light went out of his eyes, and his smile grew stiff with effort. But a second later the social systems were on-line again, and he bowed from the waist extravagantly. “I’m a Son of the South all right. You should see me stroll down Tradd Street of an evening in my white suit and walking stick.”

  Oddly enough, I could see it quite easily.

  “I’m in the next room, by the way,” Seth was saying as he looked at his watch. “Just in case you have nightmares.”

  “A minute ago I’d decided this whole weekend was going to be a nightmare.”

  Seth laughed. “Too soon to tell, I think, but I know what you mean. And if I know you, you’ve already got your escape mapped out—motel in town, then off to the airport Sunday morning without saying good-bye to anyone. Am I right?”

  I felt myself redden. “Something like that.”

  “Stick around for at least one night. Promise?”

  I shrugged. “Sure.”

  As Seth slapped me on the shoulder, I found myself pleased that he had read my mind, that even after all this time our instincts traced parallel planes.

  “So what’s on tap?” I asked, eyeing the agenda again, this time without comprehending it.

  “Now?” Seth looked at his notes. “Reception at the president’s house, then a panel discussion entitled ‘Where We’ve Been and Where We’re Going and How to Be Sure We Get There.’ Gil’s one of the facilitators, which may give you an idea of how complex the discussion is going to get. Then a concert by the class pianist and a reading by the class poet and a film by the class filmmaker. Then dinner, then free time, then a sock hop in the gym.”

  “You forgot the A.A. meeting.”

  “Right.” Seth squinted and looked at me. “That of particular interest to you?”

  “Not yet. You?”

  He shook his head. “Booze is the least of my problems.” Solemn for just a moment, Seth’s look quickly turned mischievous. “I forgot the most important item.”

  “Which one?”

  “Faculty open house—five o’clock at the library. Be sure to get there early, so you can exchange affectionate recollections with some of your favorite profs.”

  I swore. “There isn’t a member of this faculty who has ever known my name. Maybe we should sneak off to … what was the name of that place?”

  “The Jabberwock. So soon you forget your home away from home.”

  “Actually I always hated that joint. Smelled like kerosene or something.”

  “I think it was mostly the stench from gouging starving students.” Seth looked at his watch again. “I’ve got to make some calls. If I don’t see you at dinner, meet me here at nine? Maybe we can get away from the hubbub and chat for a time. Catch up and all that.”

  “Sure.”

  “And maybe just you? For an hour or so? If he wants to join us, tell Gil we’ll see him at the Jabb at ten.”

  “Okay.”

  “Good. See you later.”

  “Right.”

  Seth started to walk away, then paused and looked back, not quite meeting my eyes. “I’ve missed you, Marsh. I wish I’d done something about it a long time ago.”

  “Me, too.”

  “We’ll have to make up for it from here on out.”

  “Right.”

  “Right. Well. See you later.”

  “Yeah. See you.”

  As he hurried off to make his calls, I wondered what was going on, not with the concert or the open house or the panel discussion, but with my friend Seth Hartman.

  THREE

  Suddenly I was alone, deep in the midst of people I’d once envied and avoided, admired and feared, coveted and shunned. It was hard to remember why it had all been so complicated.

  I lugged my bag to my room, decided I’d been in jail cells more inviting, then returned to the common area. As I made my way through the crowd, I was bent on a cup of coffee and an easy exit; luckily, only etiquette prevented me from either.

  Styrofoam in hand, I opted for a stroll among the buildings and through the groves and gates and gardens, to wallow in such memories as bestirred themselves. My route was random and unfocused, a fit with both my current mood and my academic career. The day was partly cloudy, which was a mutual match as well.

  The battered lounge in the student union where I’d wasted eons playing Hearts, the Gothic dorm in which I’d lolled away my senior year, the Bauhaus library where I’d spent too many evenings in resentful deference to the inclinations of the institution, the antique appointments of the Tea Room where we’d flaunted the latest flowering of our brilliance after the library shooed us off—over the next hour I revisited those and other venues, including the chapel I’d haunted the winter of my sophomore year in the grip of a variety of religious experience I hadn’t approximated since.

  It was pleasant enough on an aesthetic level, and the recollections that came and went were not entirely repugnant. The good times had mostly been adventures—forays to other dorms or other schools in search of harmless booty, parties where something poignant or preposterous had occurred, performances where timeless marvels were revealed to my unenlightened mind. The bad times were more memorable because they seemed more searing—goals unachieved, friendships squandered, romances severed, caves of knowledge overlooked or, once explored, forgotten.

  If asked as a freshman, I would have said my goals were simple—I wanted to become witty and intelligent, sophisticated and erudite, philosophical and comical, articulate and ironic. I wanted to know something about everything and everything about something. I wanted to be liked, and I wanted to be loved. Then four years slipped past, and when I said good-bye to all that, I wasn’t any of those things. I didn’t know why.

  Despite the rush of memory, the expectancy that spurred my walk, the hope that I would be informed or even altered by the journey, went unrequited. I was visited only by the realization that the life I’d aspired to and the one I was living had only trivial points of congruence, and were in many ways polar opposites. In contrast to the world of reason and restraint toward which my education had directed me, the world in which I lived and worked was marbled with violence and cruelty, jealousy and greed, outrage and addiction, pain and degradation. Which raised the possibility that, at least for me, the time spent on this campus, acquiring a host of misperceptions I still labored to be rid of, was less a
blessing than a curse.

  The rose garden was my last stop, the only mise en scène I’d scripted, the only site that needed special notice. I entered the arboretum with reverence, made my way along cool pathways toward its center, then saw that I was not alone.

  As though we were featured players in the sequel to a classic film, with cameras rolling to the rear and grips and gaffers in the underbrush, Libby Grissom stood beside a hybrid tea, at the spot where I’d first dared to voice my feelings for her. Then as now, the moment toyed with time, created fusion and fission simultaneously, compressed the present like a concertina, then stretched it thin like taffy. Short of breath and tingling with uncertainty, I waited for something to happen without knowing what I wanted that something to be.

  Locked in a time dance of her own, her hands flighty at her sides, her eyes fixed on a perfect yellow bloom, Libby didn’t notice me at first. From the expression on her face, the accompaniment to her trance was more a dirge than a minuet. I had no doubt that I was the source of the song.

  She seemed taller than before, perhaps because she was as trim as a rake. Her once-blond hair was now a golden brown; the once-lush locks were chopped to a wedge above her ears and neck. Her clothes were sporty and simple: the running shoes well worn, the shorts tanned just lighter than her slim and muscled legs, her top imprinted with a sassy slogan. Her hands were without adornment other than the dollops of pigment that age deposits; her eyes seemed wayward and unplugged.

  Once again, my impulse was to turn and go, to postpone an encounter until I was armed with quips and counterpunches, until I had reprised our past sufficiently to know where the equities lay and whence the apologies should flow. But a bird flew off, a tree branch trembled, a leaf fell lazily to earth, and Libby’s spell was broken.

  When she turned my way, she trapped me; I was as atremble as a rabbit. “Marsh.” A hand went to her throat. Her eyes were as astonished as the bird’s, then leery as my own. “My God.”

  I waved inanely. “Ms. Grissom.”