The first time Sam saw Marx die was in October of 1993. Marx had been cast as Banquo in a black box production ofย Macbeth. โSo, hereโs the setup,โ Marx explained. โFleance and I are on our way to a dinner party at Macbethโs. We dismount our horses, though I highly doubt there will be horses, this being college theater. I light a torchโhow else will the murderers see me? The three murderers approach! They attack. I die spectacularly, cursing all responsible:ย O treachery!ย Etcetera, etcetera.โ Marx lowered his voice, โI can already tell the directorโs an idiot. Iโm going to have to work out the blocking entirely on my own, or the whole thing will end up looking shoddy. Sam, youโll play the murderers, okay? Iโll come in from the bathroom, and then youโll surprise me.โ Marx handed Sam his paperbackย Macbeth,ย open to act 3, scene 3.
Sam had only lived with Marx for twenty-three days, and he didnโt feel he knew Marx well enough to pretend to murder him, or even run lines with him. He did not wish to be entangled in someone elseโs drama, someone elseโs life. The less he knew about his roommate and the less his roommate knew about him, the better.
The main thing Sam did not wish Marx to know about him was that he had a disability, though Sam did not think of it as a disabilityโother people had disabilities; Sam had โthe thing with my foot.โ Sam experienced his body as an antiquated joystick that could reliably move only in cardinal directions. The way to avoid appearing disabled was to avoid situations in which one looked disabled: uneven terrain, unfamiliar staircases, and most analog forms of frolic. Sam demurred, โIโm not much of an actor.โ
โItโs not acting,โ Marx said. โItโs pretend murdering.โ
โAnd Iโve got so much reading to do. And a problem set due on Wednesday.โ
Marx rolled his eyes. He picked up a couch cushion. โThis pillow will be Fleance.โ
โWhoโs Fleance?โ
โMy young son. He escapes.โ Marx flung the pillow toward the door.
โFly, good Fleance, fly, fly, fly!โ
โNever a good idea to let the son of the man youโve murdered escape,โ Sam said. โIs he Fleance because he flees?โ
โAm I Banquo because I die on the way to a banquet? These are solid questions, Sam.โ
โWhat am I murdering you with?โ
โA knife? A sword? I donโt think it says. Heโor they, whatever Shakespeare isโwrites vaguely, unhelpfully, โThey attack.โ โ
โWell, I think the weapon makes a difference.โ โIโll leave the selection of a weapon to you.โ
โWhy donโt you counterattack? Arenโt you a warrior, or some such?โ โBecause Iโm not expecting to be attacked. Thatโs where you come in.
Surprise me.โ Marx smiled at Sam conspiratorially. โHelp me.ย Itโs my big scene, so, you know, I want it to look cool.โ
โYour last scene, too, right? You die.โ
โNo, I come back as a ghost, but I donโt have any lines. I just show up at the banquet,โ Marx said. โIโm not even sure if theyโll have me in the scene, or if itโll be an empty chair. It depends on how much weโre in Macbethโs point of view.โ
โIs Banquo a good role?โ Sam asked. โIโm not particularly familiar withย Macbeth.โ
โItโs the best friend. Itโs not Macbeth. Itโs not โA tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury signifying nothing.โ But it has its moments. I have a name! I get to die! I have a ghost! And Iโm only a freshman, so thereโs plenty of time for me to be the lead. The shame of it is, Iโve always wanted to play Macbeth, and I doubt anyoneโll stage it again before I graduate.โ
For the next hour, Marx died a variety of ways. He fell back on the couch; he dropped to his knees; he staggered around the common room, clutching various parts of his bodyโhis throat, his forearm, his wrist, his magnificent hair. He whispered his lines, and once, he yelled them so loudly, a prefect came by to make sure Marx wasnโt actually being murdered. Sam found that he barely thought about his foot. He enjoyed saying the murderersโ lines; hiding behind the door, then attacking Marx with a pillow from behind; pretending to put his hands around Marxโs neck. If Marx noticed that Samโs attacks were always weighted toward the right, he did not say.
โYouโre not that bad. Have you done any acting before?โ Marx asked. โNo,โ Sam said. He thought he would leave it at that, but then, scant of
breath, flattered, and indiscreet, he found himself continuing, โMy mom was a professional actress, so I used to run lines with her sometimes.โ
โWhat does she do now?โ โSheโฆWell, sheโs dead.โ โIโm sorry.โ
โA long time ago,โ Sam said. It was one thing to concede having had a mother, but to tell the story of her death to a fantastic-looking person you barely knewโฆโBy the way,โ Sam said, โlive animals are a bad idea for theater in general.โ
โTrue.โ
โNot just college theater. You mentioned beforeโโ
โIโm right there with you, Sam,โ Marx said. โMaybe you should audition next semester?โ
Sam shook his head. โWhy not?โ
โIโve got a thingโฆMaybe youโveโฆโ Sam began. โIn here. This is fine, but I donโt like being onstage. Shall we run it again?โ
Sam had never been sure when he had become friends with Marx, but he supposed that night could reasonably be considered the beginning.
He had needed a starting data point in order to calculate the total number of days of their friendship. Once he settled on the night they
rehearsed Marxโs death, he determined the number to be 4,873 days, give or take. Sam normally took comfort in numbers, but he was disturbed by how paltry this particular number was, considering the presence Marx had maintained in his life. He performed the calculation twice to confirm. Yes, it was 4,873. This was the kind of baby math Sam did when he couldnโt sleep.
Four thousand eight hundred seventy-three,ย Sam thought,ย the dollars in a seventeen-year-oldโs bank account when heโs flush, twice the number of passengers on theย Titanic,ย the population of a town where everyone knows each other, the inflation-adjusted cost of a laptop in 1990, the weight of a teenage elephant, six months or so more than the number of days I knew my mother.
Once, when he was fifteenโjust old enough to acknowledge the inner lives of others beyond himself; not yet old enough to have a driverโs license
โSam had asked his grandmother how sheโd gotten through the time after his motherโs death. Sheโd had a business to run, a sick grandson to care for, presumably her own grief to work through, though she was deeply unsentimental and never mentioned it. They were in her car on the way back from a math competition in San Diego, and Sam was giddy with the feeling of being better than everyone else at something that he didnโt care about at all.
Despite having almost died in a car accident, Sam relished these car trips. He had his best conversations with his grandmother in the car, at night, and though Bong Cha and Dong Hyun alternated chauffeur duties, he preferred when his grandmother drove. She was fast, and the trips took two- thirds of the time if Bong Cha was behind the wheel.
โHow did we get through?โ Bong Cha had been baffled by Samโs question. โWe got up in the morning,โ she said finally. โWe went to work. We went to the hospital. We came home. We went to sleep. We did it again.โ
โBut it must have been hard,โ Sam persisted.
โThe beginning was the hardest, but then days passed, and months, and years, and you got better, and it was not quite so hard,โ Bong Cha said.
Sam thought she was finished entertaining the subject when she added, โSometimes, I spoke to Anna anyway, and this helped a little.โ
โDo you mean like a ghost?โ His grandmother was the least likely person in the world to see ghosts.
โSam, donโt be ridiculous. There are no ghosts.โ
โOkay, so you spoke to her. She was definitely not a ghost. Did she ever reply?โ
Bong Cha narrowed her eyes at Sam, deciding if her grandson was trying to trick her into appearing foolish. โYes, in my mind, she did. I knew your mother so well I could play her part. The same with my own mother and my grandmother and my childhood best friend, Euna, who drowned in the lake by her cousinโs house. There are no ghosts, but up hereโโshe gestured toward her headโโitโs a haunted house.โ She squeezed Samโs hand and inelegantly changed the subject. โItโs time you learned how to drive.โ
Concealed by darkness, Sam felt comfortable admitting to Bong Cha that he was more than a little scared to begin driving himself.