Read The Flex of the Thumb Online

Authors: James Bennett

The Flex of the Thumb (7 page)

Vano felt more of the flickering in spite of, or perhaps because of, the fact he was getting aroused. After a few moments he asked, “How do we go about this?”

“Well, I can't very well put my nightgown on if I'm still wearing my clothes, can I?”

Vano started some heavy breathing. It was hard to determine where the anomaly was more peculiar in this intimate encounter—Sister's determination or his reluctance. Eventually, he found his fingers on the top brass button of Sister's navy blue wool Salvation Army jacket. Slowly, he unbuttoned them one after the other until he was able to help her slip the jacket off.

She closed her eyes as he removed her white blouse and her white bra; her large breasts tumbled free. Sister Cecilia was slightly overweight, but voluptuous. She tilted her head back and began combing her fingers through her long, black hair.

Vano removed her Salvation Army skirt and then, after some substantial hesitation, he slid her nylon underpants all the way down to her ankles. Sister stepped out, took hold of the back of his head, then pulled his face in against her stomach.

Vano smelled Sister's flesh mingled with the sweet fragrance of baby powder. He put his arms around her and let his hands travel the slick contours of her generous hips. Aroused though he was, he found there was still a tenuous location in a flickering
hooommm
. He asked Sister Cecilia if he was supposed to put her nightgown on now.

But she answered, “I can't help myself, Vano; I have to have you.”

They made love on her bed. The lovemaking gave him so much pleasure it separated him from the comfort zone. He wondered if he might be better off to stay at home instead of going off to college.

About five minutes after her convulsive orgasm, Sister sat up so she could begin squirming into her nightgown. “We must never do this again, Vano,” she declared. “It's evil.”

Vano could feel himself receding deeper, deeper down. He didn't reply.

“It's terribly, terribly evil,” said Sister again.

“I see.”

“This whole month I've wanted you, but the Lord has made His will known to me. And now I've gone right ahead and disobeyed.”

Hooommm
it was, deep and firm.

“That's what true wickedness is,” Sister continued, “Willful disobedience. We must never do this again.”

Still, Vano didn't speak. She was so distant, so way down the wrong end of the binoculars.

The next thing she said was, “Please go to your room now, Vano.”

Vano went to his room, trailing his blue jeans and underwear behind. When he went to sleep, he had the dream again. It was the pyramids, but not the pyramids exactly, because there were terraces. Whatever it was it was large, and streaked with gold from the dawn's early light.

When he woke up, he pondered the dream. Maybe it was a sign of some kind, or maybe it came from the particle people. But no, didn't he have the dream the first time before there was ever an encounter with them?

If the dream was about the pyramids, then the water could be the Nile, but how could the place be Egypt if there wasn't any sand? Whenever he had the dream, it seemed to provoke the same questions. What was it the particle people said to him?
Some day your understanding may be complete
. Vano felt not a sliver of frustration owing to the uncertainty; he was lodged in the deepest, firmest
hooommm
he'd ever known.

Sister Cecilia helped him pack his suitcases. She was uncomfortable, Vano could see it in her eyes. But for him there was no discomfort at all. The process of packing beside her was all neutral, about like counting boxcars on a passing freight train.

Chapter Three

A campus host showed Vano to his dorm when he moved in. One of his roommates, a bookish young man named Arnold Beeker, was already there. Arnold wore thick glasses with black frames reinforced by chunks of adhesive tape. His tapes and CDs were classical music. He was in the process of setting up his computer next to the reference books arranged neatly on his study desk. “You have a funny name,” he said to Vano.

“Sure.” Vano smiled.

“What does it mean?”

“What does what mean?”

“Your name,” answered Arnold Beeker. “What does it mean?”

It never occurred to Vano that a person's name was supposed to mean something. Besides, he was deep in. After a few moments he said, “I don't know. I never thought about it.”

“Since we're going to be roommates,” said Arnold, “You'd probably like to know all about me.”

“That would be nice.”

“First of all,” Arnold began, “I'm one of those peoople that bad things happen to. My father says I'm a regular
Joe Blitzflick
. I don't know who that is, but it's probably a character from a comic strip. My father spends a lot of time reading the comics.”

Vano didn't say anything.

Arnold went on, “Sometimes he even uses the highlighter on the comics. He always says he doesn't want to be standing too close to me when the shooting starts, if you know what I mean.”

Vano didn't know what he meant, but decided not to reply. Arnold continued by disclosing some of his remarkable theories about the universe and its mysteries. He had run most of these through one program or another on his computer, and he kept the results on floppy disk, for purposes of privacy.

For instance, Arnold Beeker believed that creatures from outer space observed most of North America from invisible space ships. These creatures were involved in cosmic research. He further believed that
outer space
was really a country in Eastern Europe with a different atmosphere. He further believed that the creatures who lived there had soft plastic instead of skin, and electric wires instead of bones.

Arnold was free to admit that his espousal of these and other similar theories had exposed him to harsh ridicule over time.

But Vano Lucas found no basis for objecting to any of the theories. When Arnold told him about the creatures in Eastern Europe with electric wires instead of bones, Vano said, “That sounds great, Arnold.”

“You mean you really think it's possible?”

“Sure, Arnold. It sounds real possible to me.”

Overjoyed at this acceptance and approval, Arnold said, “I can tell we're going to be fast friends. All my life people have called me a nerd because of my beliefs and the way I look. Have you ever been called a nerd?”

This was a hard one; Vano had to think. Finally he said, “I can't remember that I ever was. No.”

“You don't look like a nerd, but you sort of act like one. Have you ever been called a geek?”

“I don't think so. I can't remember for sure.”

It didn't seem to matter much to Arnold, who was wearing a wide grin. “We'll be nerds of a feather,” he said earnestly. “I can tell we're going to be fast friends.”

Vano wondered if, in the interest of honesty, he should reveal to Arnold how recently he had been one of the arrogant bastards who treat nerds with contempt and relish making their lives miserable. It also occurred to him that Arnold might take some delight in hearing about the particle people encounter. He was in a relatively deep zone, though, and there would be the problem of sequencing the information.

The arrival of the third roommate, Robin Snook, changed the agenda altogether. He was a football player. He was six feet, two inches, approximately the same height as Vano, but a great deal bulkier, at 230 pounds of muscle mass. Robin had a round, open face, and short-cropped hair.

As soon as the introductions went around, Robin said, “You're Vano Lucas? Are you serious?”

When Vano amitted that he was, Robin turned to Arnold Beeker and declared, “I
know
this guy!”

“You know him already?”

“I mean I know who he is. He brings the high heat. Everybody knows who he is.”

Arnold wondered why
he
didn't know. He also wondered what was meant by
high heat
. It might be some kind of a thermal device, but he couldn't say. Eventually, Vano told him quietly, “I used to be a baseball pitcher, Arnold. I think Robin is referring to that.”

“He used to be a baseball pitcher,” laughed Robin Snook. “That's like saying Joe Montana used to be a quarterback. What do you mean,
used to
? Aren't you on the team?”

The delay which preceded Vano's answer was long and tedious. “I can't imagine any pleasure in it.”

“Shit, this guy almost signed with the A's. Everybody wanted to sign him.”

“I had no idea,” Arnold murmured.

The conversation might have worked its way into Vano's accident and recovery, but it turned out that Robin Snook was a sports celebrity in his own right. As a football star out of high school, he'd been recruited by UCLA, Southern Cal, San Diego State, Washington, and Colorado, to name but a few.

“But you chose Entrada?” asked Arnold.

“I wanted to play right away. I don't want to waste my time redshirting or being somebody's back-up. Know what I mean?”

Arnold had no idea what
redshirting
might imply, but what he did know was that he was now rooming with two famous jocks. Some of the attention and adulation which was certain to flow in their direction might flow on over and anoint him, too. Of the two, Robin was clearly the better interview. “What's your position?” Arnold asked him.

“Tailback,” answered Robin Snook.

“But you look big enough to play the line.”

“Who wants to be a grunt? There's no glory in the line. I want to carry the ball and score touchdowns.”

“I can see your point,” Arnold admitted.

On the second day of rush week, Robin, Vano, and Arnold were headed for the afternoon mixer at the Chi house. Vano could generate no enthusiasm for fraternity life, but Arnold was smitten with the prestige which the Greek system seemed to offer.

“I'd feel a lot better if you went with me,” he told Vano. “I've never had much luck in social situations.”

Vano tried to imagine social skills inferior to those which he currently possessed. Nevertheless, he told Arnold, “I'd be happy to go with you.”

“I'm sure it would give me more confidence.”

“I'd be happy to go with you, Arnold.”

En route, the three stopped at the curb to wait for a passing steamroller at an intersection which was being resurfaced. “I really and truly think I might get a bid,” said Arnold Beeker, thinking no such thing.

Vano wondered if any fraternity would really want Arnold as part of its membership, but Robin Snook exclaimed, “That's the stuff! Always think positive!” For emphasis, he gave Arnold a whack on the back. The impact knocked Arnold's glasses onto the pavement, where the steamroller smashed them to smithereens. Picking up the powdery remains in disbelief, Arnold cupped them in his hands. “Now what am I going to do?”

“Have no fear,” counseled Robin. “Just follow me.”

But as soon as they reached the lawn of the Chi house, Robin was swallowed up by a crowd of active backslappers, who started feeding him barbecued chicken and large drafts of
Bud Lite
. He began devouring a hefty leg and thigh quarter.

Vano and Arnold were left to stand by themselves. “They're going to put me on the yoyo patrol,” Arnold lamented. “I just know they are.”

Comfortably in
hooommm,
Vano needed six seconds to process his reply: “What is the yoyo patrol?”

“That's where they take you off by yourselves with all the other geeks and dweebs who won't get a bid. They put you all together so they can keep you out of the way.”

“I see.”

“Where's Robin, anyway?”

Vano explained, “He's eating barbecued chicken and getting slapped on the back by a large group of juniors and seniors.”

Then a suave looking junior by the name of Skip Leslie approached them. He wore a blue blazer with the Chi crest. Had he realized who Vano Lucas was, he might have chosen a different strategy, but he judged him by the appearance of his companion. “I'd like you fellows to follow me this way, if you don't mind.”

They followed Skip Leslie to the basement of the Chi house, where the recreation room was located. Since he was nearly blind without his glasses, Arnold kept a firm grip on Vano's shirttail all the way.

The recreation room was quiet and dimly lit. Someone was showing a video tape of Chi history. Vano and Arnold took seats beside Rusty and Toby. Rusty had a marine haircut; he wore green camouflage fatigues, a maroon beret, and glossy combat boots. Toby had shoulder-length blond hair and a full beard. He wore rubber tire sandals and a hopsack tunic with peacocks embroidered on the front.

Arnold asked Vano to describe them. Vano described Rusty first, then Toby.

“I knew it,” Arnold declared. “This is the yoyo patrol.” He turned in the general direction of Skip Leslie to ask, “This is the yoyo patrol, isn't it?”

“You bet it is,” was Leslie's answer.

Then Arnold asked if he could have some of the barbecued chicken.

“We'll have to see if there's any left, a little later on,” said Skip. And then he left.

In deep and firm, Vano watched the videotape. It was educational, but not engaging.

Later in the afternoon, on the way back to the dorm, Vano and Arnold stopped at the student union for a soft drink. Arnold stumbled by mistake into the women's restroom. He spent several moments hunting for a urinal, then gave up the search in disgust. He decided to use one of the stalls.

The stall he chose was occupied by Rita Lieberman, who was a very aggressive female. Rita made not a sound but delivered a blow across the bridge of Arnold's nose with the spine of her hardbound dictionary. The impact left Arnold semi-conscious.

The first football game of the season was against Las Lagrimas College. It was late in the second quarter when Robin entered the game at tailback. Entrada was already trailing by a score of 20-0. In the huddle, quarterback Howard Leslie, who called himself Skip, said, “Robin, I'm calling your number right now. We'll run the 28 off tackle.” His name was not actually Skip, and nobody called him that, but he had adopted it as a nickname because he thought it appropriate for a quarterback.

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