At the edge of the lake, just before the sandy (and, the Colonel told me, fake) beach, we sat down in an Adirondack swing. I made the obligatory joke: 'Don't grab my boob.' The Colonel gave an obligatory laugh, then asked, 'Want a smoke?' I had never smoked a cigarette, but when in Rome…
'Is it safe here?'
'Not really,' he said, then lit a cigarette and handed it to me. I inhaled. Coughed. Wheezed. Gasped for breath.
Coughed again. Considered vomiting. Grabbed the swinging bench, head spinning, and threw the cigarette to the ground and stomped on it, convinced my Great Perhaps did not involve cigarettes.
'Smoke much?' He laughed, then pointed to a white speck across the lake and said, 'See that?'
'Yeah,' I said. 'What is that? A bird?'
'It's the swan,' he said.
'Wow. A school with a swan. Wow.'
'That swan is the spawn of Satan. Never get closer to it than we are now.'
'Why?'
'It has some issues with people. It was abused or something. It'll rip you to pieces. The Eagle put it there to keep us from walking around the lake to smoke.'
'The Eagle?'
'Mr. Starnes. Code name: the Eagle. The dean of students. Most of the teachers live on campus, and they'll all bust you. But only the Eagle lives in the dorm circle, and he sees all. He can smell a cigarette from like five miles.'
'Isn't his house back there?' I asked, pointing to it. I could see the house quite clearly despite the darkness, so it followed he could probably see us.
'Yeah, but he doesn't really go into blitzkrieg mode until classes start,' Chip said nonchalantly.
'God, if I get in trouble my parents will kill me,' I said.
'I suspect you're exaggerating. But look, you're going to get in trouble. Ninety-nine percent of the time, your parents never have to know, though. The school doesn't want your parents to think you became a fuckup here any more than
'Okay,' I said, although I wondered:
'All right, Pudge. We have reached the point in the evening when I'm obliged to go and find my girlfriend. So give me a few of those cigarettes you'll never smoke anyway, and I'll see you later.'
I decided to hang out on the swing for a while, half because the heat had finally dissipated into a pleasant, if muggy, eighty-something, and half because I thought Alaska might show up. But almost as soon as the Colonel left, the bugs encroached: no-see-ums (which, for the record, you can see) and mosquitoes hovered around me in such numbers that the tiny noise of their rubbing wings sounded cacophonous. And then I decided to smoke.
Now, I did think,
I made it through three entire drags before I felt nauseous and dizzy and only semipleasantly buzzed. I got up to leave. As I stood, a voice behind me said: 'So do you really memorize last words?'
She ran up beside me and grabbed my shoulder and pushed me back onto the porch swing.
'Yeah,' I said. And then hesitantly, I added, 'You want to quiz me?'
'JFK,' she said.
'That's obvious,' I answered.
'Oh, is it now?' she asked.
'No. Those were his last words. Someone said, `Mr. President, you can't say Dallas doesn't love you,' and then he said, 'That's obvious,' and then he got shot.'
She laughed. 'God, that's awful. I shouldn't laugh. But I will,' and then she laughed again. 'Okay, Mr. Famous Last Words Boy. I have one for you.' She reached into her overstuffed backpack and pulled out a book. 'Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
And then she lit a cigarette and sucked on it so hard for so long that I thought the entire thing might burn off in one drag. She exhaled and read to me:
''He'—that's Simon Bolivar—*was shaken by the overwhelming revelation that the headlong race between his misfortunes and his dreams was at that moment reaching the finish line. The rest was darkness. 'Damn it,' he sighed. 'How will I ever get out of this labyrinth!''' I knew great last words when I heard them, and I made a mental note to get a hold of a biography of this Simon Bolivar fellow. Beautiful last words, but I didn't quite understand. 'So what's the labyrinth?' I asked her.
And now is as good a time as any to say that she was beautiful. In the dark beside me, she smelled of sweat and sunshine and vanilla, and on that thin-mooned night I could see little more than her silhouette except for when she smoked, when the burning cherry of the cigarette washed her face in pale red light. But even in the dark, I could see her eyes — fierce emeralds. She had the kind of eyes that predisposed you to supporting her every endeavor. And not just beautiful, but hot, too, with her breasts straining against her tight tank top, her curved legs swinging back and forth beneath the swing, flip-flops dangling from her electric-blue-painted toes. It was right then, between when I asked about the labyrinth and when she answered me, that I realized the
Her mouth close enough to me that I could feel her breath warmer than the air, she said, 'That's the mystery, isn't it? Is the labyrinth living or dying? Which is he trying to escape — the world or the end of it?' I waited for her to keep talking, but after a while it became obvious she wanted an answer.
'Uh, I don't know,' I said finally. 'Have you really read all those books in your room?'
She laughed. 'Oh God no. I've maybe read a third of 'em. But I'm
She told me that I reminded her of the Colonel when he came to Culver Creek. They were freshmen together, she said, both scholarship kids with, as she put it, 'a shared interest in booze and mischief.' The phrase
'I got rid of that problem quickly.' She smiled. 'By November, I'd gotten him his first girlfriend, a perfectly nice non-Week day Warrior named Janice. He dumped her after a month because she was too rich for his poverty- soaked blood, but whatever. We pulled our first prank that year — we filled Classroom 4 with a thin layer of marbles. We've progressed some since then, of course.' She laughed. So Chip became the Colonel — the military-