Penitence
Vincent
glanced at the graffiti on the wall of the Flatbush Avenue/Brooklyn College
subway station, and then laughed. Amidst the usual array of “fuck you, eat
shit, etc.” on the walls was a declaration that resonated with him, “I’m
free!!!!!” emblazoned in large, capital letters.
I’m free, Vincent
thought.
He wanted to shout, but kept his thoughts to
himself, “No luggage to haunt me!
The train pulled into the station, and Vincent
began his usual trip back to Manhattan. He opened his briefcase and read a letter
from his doctoral advisor regarding the recently submitted final chapter of his
dissertation,
“Excellent.
I will be mailing my detailed comments
and suggested changes shortly. Cornell Press is quite interested in your work
and would like to discuss it with you in greater detail when completed.”
Vincent
was among the best and brightest of the graduate students in Sociology at New
York University. His dissertation was relevant, both in terms of the changing
ethnic landscape of New York City, and the general mood of the country. President Lyndon Johnson had declared a “War
on Poverty;” Vincent’s study could become an important resource.
He took out another letter from his briefcase,
inhaled its perfumed fragrance, and read it for the third or fourth time: “I
love you, miss you more than I had ever imagined. I can’t wait to get back to New York, be in
your arms, and make love, make love, make love.
I’m repeating myself, I know. Forgive the redundancy and relish the
passion. Yours, and I really mean it, Yours, Rachel”
She
was part of a team of graduates at Barcelona University in Underwater Archaeology,
diving for ancient artifacts beneath the harbor at Constantinople. Vincent
smiled as he recalled their first meeting.
He was visiting a friend in Barcelona, an assistant professor in
archaeology, and they went to the University’s practice pool. The first image
of his future love, then unknown to him, emerging from the pool. Once out of the water, she removed black
headgear, goggles, revealing lustrous eyes, delicate lips, long, flowing blonde
hair, firm, shapely body, a Venus emerging from the depths.
On
the train, Vincent began to read The New
York Times. It was a long ride to and from Brooklyn College, where he was
an Instructor. The trip afforded him the
luxury of reading the newspaper almost in its entirety. Immersed in the Op Ed pages, he was suddenly
distracted by a sense that somebody was staring at him. He continued reading,
but finally looked up. Seated diagonally across from him was a scowling, very
heavyset man: puffy, calloused hands,
short, thick neck buried in a drab, grimy, grey coat, clutching a paper bag. He
looked directly at Vincent, as though they knew each other. Vincent went back to reading, but peered over
the edge of the paper. The man glowered.
Vincent
was confused. Why was this stranger looking at him with such anger? Had their paths ever crossed? Did he have to be concerned that the guy was
in any way dangerous? He concluded the man was just looking for someone to
hate, so why not the neatly dressed guy with the fancy briefcase. Vincent went
back to reading the “Times.” Minutes passed,
but he could not take his attention off the man, probably about his own age,
who continued glowering at him. Nothing in the newspaper managed to interest
Vincent, but suddenly an article on elementary school education in New York
City caused him to stop reading. He looked up, paused, closed his eyes, and
shook his head.
Christ,
thought Vincent, could this be ‘Piggy’?’
No, never” He looked at the man again. Holy
shit, he thought; It is. It’s one of the Fat Pigs the name he and
his elementary school buddies at P.S. 139 in the Bronx had given to two short,
obese, identical twin brothers. They were not in Vincent’s class; he did not
even know their names. The fact that
they were twins, obese, and, most especially, butcher’s kids, made them perfect
objects of ridicule. So on their way home from school, Vincent and his buddies
would chase after the brothers, shouting. “Heh, ‘Pigs has your father cut some
pork chops from your fat asses? Can you grab your balls under all that
blubber?”
The twins never responded; bit their lips,
buried their heads in their coats, and walked as fast as they could toward
home, pursued by Vincent and the rest, shouting after them, until the brothers
turned up a block toward home. Nobody knew where they lived, or even cared, what
mattered was that they showed up for school every day to provide entertainment
for Vincent’s buddies, who had himself been an overweight child, and called,
“Fat Vinnie,” but became taller and slimmer as he matured toward adolescence.
Now, over twenty years later, one of the twins was seated across Vincent,
smarting with childhood anger.
He
wanted to go over to the man, tell him he was sorry.
But how do you make up for past
cruelty? Vincent thought.
Would he
go over to him and state, “Hi, I’m Vinnie Esposito. Did you go to P.S. 139? You did.
Well, I’m sorry for calling you, ‘Fat Shit.”
Vincent
soon dismissed the ridiculous idea. Besides, it might not even be the same person. However, the resemblance was startling, a
thirty year old man with the identical looks of an obese ten year old from the
distant past. Apparently, for all his assumed maturity and dignity, Vincent
must have looked pretty much like the bratty twelve year old that had tormented
this overweight man in his boyhood.
The
train finally arrived at the last stop in Brooklyn before speeding under the
river to Manhattan. The man pushed
himself out of his seat, clutching the bag as he made his way toward the subway
doors. He took one last look at Vincent
and uttered, “Fuck you,” loud enough for Vincent to hear, then exited.
The
train sped on toward Manhattan. Vincent
sat there distressed; his childhood malefactions, never mentioned to the priest
during confession came Moreover the cruelty of insults was never discussed as a
sin during catechism study, His past hurtful actions came rushing back to him
with the speed and intensity of the roaring train. He imagined his childhood victims staring at
him, angry, hurt, tearful: Myrna Zebrowitz, the first girl in the school to get
braces. Vincent shouted at her in the school yard, “Heh Myrna, French kiss you
and my tongue comes out bleeding;” Barbara and Jimmy Zupan, super’s kids, The wicked chorus of Vincent’s buddies never
missed the opportunity of humiliating them, “Heh, sit over there; you both
smell like shit;” Lenny Schwartz, the idiot savant, who memorized train
schedules for the entire country and masturbated insanely through his pockets
when shown brassiere ads, which Vincent did at every opportunity, even during
class, causing notes to be sent home to Lenny’s parents about his perverse
behavior; the twenty year old, mentally handicapped, “Jerry Moon,” that would
be greeted with a song, “Shine on, shine on Jerry’s Moon. Piss in your pants
today, Jerry?” Then they would drop their trousers and moon him, scampering
away, then the lumbering six foot child man, hopelessly chasing after, then
looking up to heaven, a wounded beast bellowing, ”My mother says you got to
stop! Stop!”
But
one day, Jerry caught Vincent and got him in a headlock and squeezed with all
his might. Vincent’s face turned red, then purple, life running out of him,
finally, he bit Jerry’s arm like a mad dog until it bled; Jerry screamed and Vincent
let go, but his bite left a permanent scar. Vincent barely escaped with his life.
Most
horrible of all was little Patty Dinofrio, the harmless, petty thief, who kept
his meager treasures in a bag that he always carried with him. Vincent ran
after him, shouting, “Run, Patty, run, run! The cops are after your ass.”
Poor
Patty ran as fast as he could and just at the moment he got a good distance
ahead of Vincent, a gas line in an old store exploded. Poor little Patty, scattered
about like confetti on New Year’s Eve.
Having
forgotten the Patti moment until now, Vincent replayed it over and over,
despite its terror. He tried to read the “Times,” but it was useless. He folded the paper, tucked it into his
briefcase, closed his eyes; gradually the roar and rocking of the train lulled
him into a disquieting sleep. He heard his widowed mother, always in black,
endlessly repeating the Rosary, Gesu,
Sanata Maria, Madre di Dio, prega per noi peccatori, adesso e nell’ora della nostra
morte. Madre di Dio , Madre di Dio, Madre ... The cadence became faster,
the prayers louder and louder. The train came to a halt; Vincent was jolted out
of his nightmare; Broadway and 94th Street. He jumped out of his seat, headed for the
doors and managed to get out just as they shut behind him. He raced up the
stairs to the street.
The
night was colder in Manhattan; Vincent lifted his coat collar and tucked one
hand into his pocket, switching his briefcase now and then from one hand to the
other to keep warm as he made the long walk from Broadway to his apartment on
Central Park West. He would always walk
the better-lit 94th rather than the darker, side streets with
abandoned tenements, strewn with garbage and occasional shadowy figures in
doorways. He stopped at the red light at the corner of Columbus Avenue, glanced
at the Holy Name of Jesus Christ Church across the street, shrugged, his eyes
momentarily and continued on his way, pulling his coat collar tighter around
his neck, lowering his head, and making his way toward home.
He decided to take a short cut across a small
park with a tennis court, usually empty at this hour of the night. As he came
to a narrow path outside the gates of the tennis court, a figure jumped out of
the darkness.
“Don’t
move!”
Vincent
stopped, and saw a figure wearing a black ski mask. To Vincent, the figure
resembled a penitent in a sacred procession he observed in Spain. “Give me your
wallet,” demanded the thief and don’t pull any shit.”
“What, what is this? Vincent asked.
“What
the fuck do you think it is, now give me your money.”
“O.K.
O.K. I’ll give you everything I have.” Vincent’s hand was trembling, barely
able to unbutton his coat.
“Hurry
up,”
“O.K.
O.K.” Vincent managed to reach into his suit pocket, pulled out his wallet, and
held it to the thief, who rifled through it quickly.
The
thief pulled out some dollar bills, “This is nothing, bull shit.”
“It’s
all I have. I don’t carry much cash.”
The
thief punched Vincent in the stomach. He
fell to the ground, his briefcase flying across the path.
“You
got more, asshole, I know it. Give me
your watch.”
Vincent
staggered to his feet, removed his watch, and gave it to him.
The
thief gave it a quick examination,
“More
shit.”
He
put the money and watch in his pocket, then kicked Vincent hard,
“What’s in that briefcase . . . the briefcase,
Fuckhead!”
A
long pause, Vincent fell to the ground again, closed his eyes, shook his head,
then looked directly at the thief, and stated calmly, “More shit.”
“What’s
that?”
“More
shit,” Vincent said, only louder.
The
thief hit him again. “Don’t fuck with
me.”
“I’m
not.”
Vincent
received a powerful backhand slap from the thief. He went sprawling. After a few seconds, he shook his head, then
crawled toward the thief.
Slowly,
deliberately Vincent said, “Is that it?”
“What’d
you say?” said the thief, who could not believe what he heard.
“Is
that it? Vincent asked again, this time louder.
Alarmed, the thief looked about, then kicked Vincent
again.
“Give
me the briefcase,” said the thief.
Vincent did not move.
The
thief kicked him again, this time more fiercely. “Pick up that case and give it
to me.”
Vincent
spit up some blood, tried to get up then fell over, and while gagging on his
own blood said, “Is that it?”
The
thief, his furious eyes peering through the ski mask drew closer to Vincent,
who shouted, “Come on, again, . . . again, or I won’t pick it up.”
The
thief, his face almost touching Vincent’s, grabbed him by the throat, then stated
slowly, “You’re fucked man, you are really fucked,” spit at Vincent then turned
and walked quickly away.
“Come
on, again,” shouted Vincent . . .”Again.”
The
thief disappeared into the night.
Vincent,
mouth bleeding, one eye shut, struggled to raise himself up, clung to the
fence, and yelled after the thief, “Again”
A. Richard
Sogliuzzo
A. Richard Sogliuzzo is a retired
professor of Theatre History and Practice, Comparative Literature, University
of Texas, Dallas (full time) as well as at universities in the Los Angeles area
(i.e UCLA, California State University, Long Beach) teaching Playwriting, as
well as Comparative Literature. Additionally, he taught in the Oscher Program
for seniors at UCLA. He is a widely published scholar of theatre history
in America and Europe. Among his various honors is a Fulbright Hays Senior
Fellowship to Italy, resulting in his book, Luigi Pirandello: the Playwright
in the Theatre. He has also
lectured at theatre schools throughout Italy. His plays, Charade and Discovery were produced at Los Angeles' Theatre
West and Wallenboyd Theatre. He was a Theatre Critic for National Public
Radio's Morning Edition. Before
his writing career he served in the U.S. Army Intelligence Signal Corps.
Tags:
Short Fiction