night. It was kickass.” He nodded toward the gramophone he was carrying.
“Lots of musical guys in the batch this year so we went with a sort of a musical thing, really diverse and abstract. If you’d
seen it, it would’ve blown your mind.”
Stanley watched the boy inflate, and noted the shift from
they
to
we
. He sensed that
diverse
and
abstract
were key words, buzz words that had the power to set the speaker apart and mark himas one of the chosen. This boy was studied
in his carelessness, tossing his head like a pony and turning his hip out so he stood like a model in a menswear magazine.
“This your first time auditioning?” the boy asked. He moved now, walking over to the secretary’s office door and bending at
the knee to place the gramophone carefully on the floor below the wall of oiled golden pigeonholes. Stanley heard the voice
of his high-school drama teacher: Move as you say your line, not after you say it.
“Yeah,” he said. “Should I be worried?”
“Nah,” the boy said coolly. “Just relax and have fun and don’t try too hard. It’s way less of a big deal than everyone makes
out.”
“Did you have to audition for Wardrobe?”
“No.”
Stanley waited, but the boy didn’t say anything further. He straightened up and tried the door of the secretary’s office half-heartedly,
but it was locked. He looked again at Stanley.
“The thing that’s strange about this place,” he said, “is that nobody has anything terrible to say. Even the ones who don’t
get in—have you talked to the ones who don’t get in?”
“No,” Stanley said.
“They always say, I know I want it now. I’ve seen a glimpse of what goes on in there and I might not have got in but I’ve
got a fire in me now and by God I’m going to work and work and try again next year and I’m going to keep auditioning until
I get in. They say, What an honor and a privilege to have been able to audition with these amazing people, spend a weekend
at the Institute and get a glimpse into where real talent comes from. They say, That place is truly a place of awakening.
Do you find that weird?”
Stanley shrugged uncertainly. He had stepped back a half-step while the boy was speaking and he could feel the radiating cool
of the porcelain basin against the small of his back.
“Nobody gives the finger as they walk out the door. Nobody says, Thanks a fucking heap. Nobody says, I didn’t want to come
to your pissant ugly school for dicks anyway. Nobody says, Bullshit I’m not as good as that guy, or that guy, you tell me
exactly why I didn’t get in. Nobody says anything terrible at all. Do you honestly not find that weird?”
“It’s a prestigious school. I guess people just feel really strongly about that,” said Stanley.
“Yeah,” said the boy, contemptuous all of a sudden, and visibly dismissing Stanley as a person with nothing to offer and nothing
to say. “Anyway, good luck. Might see you round here next year.”
“Yeah,” said Stanley. He felt ashamed of his own dullness but he was too preoccupied with his anxiety about the audition to
care. He turned back to the fountain and shoved his hands viciously back into his pockets, listening until he heard the boy’s
footsteps dwindle away down the corridor and finally the heavy velvet thump of the auditorium door.
THREE
Thursday
The morning paper reads
Teacher Denies Sex With Student
.
“Poor Mr. Saladin,” says the saxophone teacher. “Poor Mr. Saladin, with his slender hands and his throbbing lonely heart and
his face like—”
“It doesn’t show his face,” interrupts Patsy, who is feeling cranky. “He’s holding his jacket over his head.”
The phone rings.
“They imagine it all the same,” says the saxophone teacher, “the thirsty mothers with their sad black eyes. They imagine sharp
little teeth and a wet gulping swallow. They imagine small bluish pouches underneath his eyes.”
Patsy contemplates the