Bea always says returning to campus is like coming home.
But it doesnโt feel that way to Henry. Then again, he never felt at home atย home,ย only a vague sense of dread, the eggshell-laden walk of someone constantly in danger of disappointing. And thatโs pretty much what he feels now, so maybe sheโs right, after all.
โMr. Strauss,โ says the dean, reaching across the desk. โIโm so glad you could make it.โ
They shake hands, and Henry lowers himself into the office chair. The same chair he sat in three years ago when Dean Melrose threatened to fail him if he didnโt have the sense to leave. And nowโ
You want to be enough.
โSorry it took me so long,โ he says, but the dean waves away the apology.
โYouโre a busy man, Iโm sure.โ
โRight,โ says Henry, shifting in his seat. His suit chafes; too many months spent among mothballs in the back of the closet. He doesnโt know what to do with his hands.
โSo,โ he says awkwardly, โyou said there was a position open, in the theology school, but you didnโt say if it was adjunct or an aide.โ
โItโs tenure.โ
Henry stares at the salt-and-pepper man across the table, and has to resist the urge to laugh in his face. A tenure track isnโt just coveted, itโs cutthroat. People spend years vying for those positions.
โAnd you thought of me.โ
โThe moment I saw you in that cafรฉ,โ says the dean with a fundraising smile.
You want to be whatever they want.
The dean sits forward in his chair. โThe question, Mr. Strauss, is simple.
What do you want for yourself?โ
The words echo through his head, a terrible, reverberating symmetry.
Itโs the same question Melrose asked that autumn day when he called Henry into his office, three years into his PhD, and told him it was over. On some level, Henry knew it was coming. Heโd already transferred from the theological seminary into the broader religious studies program, focus sliding over and between themes that a hundred people had already explored, unable to find new ground, unable to believe.
โWhat do you want for yourself?โ heโd asked, and Henry considered sayingย my parentsโ pride,ย but that didnโt seem like a good answer, so heโd said the next truest thingโthat he honestly wasnโt sure. That heโd blinked and somehow years had gone by, and everyone else had carved their trenches, paved their paths, and he was still standing in a field, uncertain where to dig.
The dean had listened, and leaned his elbows on the table and told him that he was good.
But good wasnโt enough.
Which meant, of course,ย heย wasnโt enough.
โWhat do you want for yourself?โ the dean asks now. And Henry still doesnโt have any other answer.
โI donโt know.โ
And this is the part where the dean shakes his head, where he realizes that Henry Strauss is still as lost as ever. Only he doesnโt, of course. He smiles and says, โThatโs okay. Itโs good to be open. But youย doย want to come back, donโt you?โ
Henry is silent. He sits with the question.
He always liked learning. Loved it, really. If he could have spent his whole life sitting in a lecture hall, taking notes, could have drifted from department to department, haunting different studies, soaking up language and history and art, maybe he would have felt full, happy.
Thatโs how he spent the first two years.
And those first two years, heย wasย happy. He had Bea, and Robbie, and all he had to do was learn. Build a foundation. It was the house, the one that he was supposed to build on top of that smooth surface, that was the problem.
It was just so โฆ permanent.
Choosing a class became choosing a discipline, and choosing a discipline became choosing a career, and choosing a career became choosing a life, and how was anyone supposed to do that, when you only had one?
But teaching, teaching might be a way to have what he wanted. Teaching is an extension of learning, a way to be a perpetual student. And yet. โIโm not qualified, sir.โ
โYouโre an unconventional choice,โ the dean admits, โbut that doesnโt mean youโre the wrong one.โ
Except in this case, thatโs exactly what it means. โI donโt have my doctorate.โ
The frost spreads into a sheen of ice across the deanโs vision. โYou have a fresh perspective.โ
โArenโt there requirements?โ
โThere are, but thereโs a measure of latitude, to account for different backgrounds.โ
โI donโt believe in God.โ
The words tumble out like stones, landing heavy on the desk between them.
And Henry realizes, now that theyโre out, that they arenโt entirely true. He doesnโt know what he believes, hasnโt for a long time, but itโs hard to entirely discount the presence of a higher power when he recently sold his soul to a lower one.
Henry realizes the room is still quiet.
The dean looks at him for a long moment, and he thinks heโs done it, heโs broken through.
But then Melrose leans forward, and says, in a measured tone, โI donโt either.โ He sits back. โMr. Strauss, we are an academic institution, not a church. Dissent is at the heart of dissemination.โ
But thatโs the problem. No one willย dissent. Henry looks at Dean Melrose, and imagines seeing that same blind acceptance on the face of
every faculty member, every teacher, every student, and feels ill. Theyโll look at him, and see exactly what they want. Who they want. And even if he comes across someone whoย wantsย to argue, who relishes conflict or debate, it wonโt be real.
None of it will ever be real again.
Across the table, the deanโs eyes are a milky gray. โYou can have anything you want, Mr. Strauss. Be anyone you want. And weโd like to have you here.โ He stands, holds out his hand. โThink about it.โ
Henry says, โI will.โ And he does.
He thinks about it on the way across campus, and on the subway, every station carrying him farther away from that life. The one that was, and the one that wasnโt. Thinks about it as he unlocks the store, shrugs out of the ill-fitting coat and flings it onto the nearest shelf, undoes the tie at his throat. Thinks about it as he feeds the cat, and unpacks the latest box of books, gripping them until his fingers ache, but at least theyโre solid, theyโre real, and he can feel the storm clouds forming in his head, so he goes into the back room, finds the bottle of Meredithโs whisky, a few fingersโ worth leftover from the day after his deal, and carries it back to the front of the store.
Itโs not even noon, but Henry doesnโt care.
He pulls out the cork and fills a coffee cup as the customers filter in, waiting for someone to shoot him a dirty look, to shake their head in disapproval, or mutter something, or even leave. But they all just keep shopping, keep smiling, keep looking at Henry as if he canโt do anything wrong.
Finally, an off-duty cop comes in, and Henry doesnโt even try to hide the bottle by the till. Instead, he looks straight at the man and takes a long drink from his cup, certain that heโs breaking some law, either because of the open container, or the public intoxication.
But the cop only smiles, and raises an imaginary glass. โCheers,โ he says, eyes frosting over as he speaks.
Take a drink every time you hear a lie. Youโre a great cook.
(They say as you burn toast.) Youโreย soย funny.
(Youโve never told a joke.) Youโre so โฆ
โฆ handsome.
โฆ ambitious.
โฆ successful.
โฆ strong.
(Are you drinking yet?)
Youโre so โฆ
โฆ charming.
โฆ clever.
โฆ sexy.
(Drink.)
So confident.
So shy.
So mysterious.
So open.
You are impossible, a paradox, a collection at odds. You are everything to everyone.
The son they never had.
The friend they always wanted. A generous stranger.
A successful son.
A perfect gentleman. A perfect partner.
A perfect โฆ Perfect โฆย (Drink.)
They love your body. Your abs.
Your laugh.
The way you smell.
The sound of your voice. They want you.
(Not you.)
They need you. (Not you.) They love you. (Not you.)
You are whoever they want you to be.
You are more than enough, because you are not real. You are perfect, becauseย youย donโt exist.
(Not you.) (Never you.)
They look at you and see whatever they want โฆ Because they donโt seeย youย at all.