So why do you look happy? I said to Flowers. I said, I don’t think Drucker loves black people much, either.
“I’m happy cause you dad an old friend about to win something he been fighting for. And I’m sure Drucker don’t love black people, but that don’t mean he should be outlawed from saying so in Wilmette… click click click… Now, how you said that — that’s bothering me. Drucker don’t love black people either—what’s that? What’s that either? You ain’t black youself the sudden?”
It was the start of a conversation that I didn’t want to have, but it was important to Flowers that we have it every couple weeks.
Only bancers care if I’m black, I said.
“I guess you calling me a bancer then, ever the hell that means.”
I said, You don’t really care about the color of my skin, Flowers. I said, You just think you’re supposed to. I said, I’m your friend Judah’s son who writes and that’s what matters to you. That’s why you’re my friend.
“That don’t change that you black.”
I said, I’m an Israelite.
“You a black Israelite.”
And I’m an Israelite with detached earlobes and I’m an Israelite born in Chicago and I’m an Israelite who usually wears a hoodie and an Israelite who ate chicken last night. An Israelite is an Israelite, I said.
“Black is black,” said Flowers.
I said, Only because you say so.
“A lot of people would say so,” Flowers said. “And from what you tell me, ain’t no shortage of Israelites who’d reduce you to only black.”
You and them — you’re all just people, though, I said.
That cracked him up. “Oh, I guess I misunderstood — you’re like a hippie, now,” he said. “That girl from yesterday must be doing some job on you, man. Good for her. Good for you. It’s a healthier way for you to be.”
Good teachers are so busy listening for a sign that you’ve learned what they’ve tried to teach that they almost can’t help but eventually hear it, even when it isn’t there, even when it’s the opposite of what you’re really saying. Flowers heard we where I’d said you. He heard “We’re all just people,” as in, “If we could only get over our superficial differences, we’d all love each other,” when that wasn’t what I meant at all. What I meant was that I was the Israelite Gurion ben-Judah, so I didn’t have to answer to people. What I meant was Adonai doesn’t care what color my skin is, but He does care that I have the soul of an Israelite — He treats me differently because of it.
“So how is that girl?” said Flowers. “June, right?”
I kissed her, I said.
Saying that, my mouth remembered the push of June’s tongue, and I shivered. I knew the memory would wear out with use, and I saw I had to be careful not only about how many times I used it, but when I used it, too. If I hadn’t remembered June’s tongue, I would have stayed pissed about Adonai and my father and the Israelites, and I should have stayed pissed — it was important to stay pissed about those kinds of things, to hold onto the pissedness until it thickened and became useful — but the shiver thinned the pissedness, made the pissedness seem less important. I felt warm, but less dangerous.
“Kissed her!” Flowers said.
We banged fists.
“You figure out what’s the Side of Damage?” he said.
A thing I lead, I said.
“You’re talkin’ like a koan. Got something to show me?”
It’s on the music stand, I said, but it’s only three lines long.
“Don’t say only,” said Flowers. He said, “Right three lines — specially they the openers — that’s big. They the right ones?”
I think so, I said.
But I was mistaken. I hadn’t even swapped love for damage yet, let alone made forever not always.
The right ones follow the table of contents, 496 pages ago.
Esther Salt sat alone on her stoop without a jacket. From a block away, I could make our her shape, but her face was blurry — I couldn’t tell whether or not she looked pretty. Nor could I decide if I wanted her to. It seemed to be an important thing to decide in advance, so even though I was running a few minutes late for my meeting with her dad, I slowed my pace by 50 % and kept my eyes on the sidewalk. The problem was I didn’t know which kind of love was truer: the kind where some girls would look pretty to me but I wouldn’t try to be with them because I loved June, or the kind where no one but June would look pretty.
The last I’d seen Esther was seven days earlier and she’d been pretty in the way Natalie Portman would be pretty if I took a time machine to the set of The Professional in 1994, when Portman was young enough to be my girlfriend, yet I somehow failed to realize Portman wasn’t Mathilda, budding schoolgirl assassin, but rather the actress playing Mathilda. I.e., the last I’d seen Esther, I’d believed she was meant to mother my sons. I had just finished studying in the study with the Rabbi and there were still a few minutes to kill before dinner. Esther was playing backgammon with a couple of her sisters, Kinneret and Ayelet, at the dining room table. I pulled up a chair and, quick as a slap, I felt like a shmendrick who’d screwed up his life — Esther wouldn’t look at me, or even say hi.
It is true that I’d quit having conversations with her ever since she’d broken up with me, but it wasn’t because I hadn’t wanted to have conversations with her — I had only quit on my mom’s advice. She’d told me Esther would feel how gone from her I was and then decide to get back together with me. I didn’t understand how that plan could work if Esther didn’t try to talk to me first — if she didn’t even try, how could she know for sure that I refused to have a conversation with her? — but I trusted my mom and I’d stuck to the plan.
Kinneret said, “Gurion, do you know how to play sheishbeish?” Sheishbeish is backgammon, and Kinneret was the kindest and eldest of the Rabbi’s seven daughters. She had purple eyes and always bit her lip while squinting at me nicely from across the table at dinner whenever I asked Esther to pass me food and got ignored.
A little, I told her. I’ve played a couple times.
“Have you played with the cube?”
What cube? I said.
“What cube?” mumbled Esther, eyes on the board. “The doubling cube,” she mumbled. “It’s only half the game.” She was talking to herself as if she didn’t really want to say anything, as if not knowing about the doubling cube was so stupid to her that no matter how hard she tried, she couldn’t hold the contempt back — like the contempt was so fierce that it was able to force its way out of her mouth against her will.
“I know the cube!” Ayelet said. She didn’t say it mean, though — she said it excited and, right after she said it, she touched her right cheek to her right shoulder and made a pop-eyed crazyface and a hissing sound. Ayelet was seven, and very shy, and that was what she’d do when her voice came out louder than she’d planned. Esther used to do the crazyface hissing, too, but not because she’d been loud — Esther was never loud. She’d do it whenever we were alone, staring at each other and saying nothing, wondering what we were supposed to do next, which would have been kiss if she wasn’t Hasidic.
“When you play with the doubling cube,” said Kinneret, “you can form strategies of intimidation. Do you want to learn?”
“It’s fun,” said Ayelet.
“There’s no time to teach about the doubling cube,” said Esther. Teach about—she wouldn’t even put the him between the words. “Ema said five minutes til dinner.”