1    BRUCE CALLS FROM  MULHOLLAND    Bruce calls, stoned and sunburned, from Los Angeles and tells me that he's  sorry. He tells me he's sorry for not being here, at campus with me. He  tells me that I was right, that he should have flown to the workshop this  summer, and he tells me that he's sorry he's not in New Hampshire and that  he's sorry he hasn't called me in a week and I ask him what he's doing in  Los Angeles and don't mention that it has been two months.    Bruce tells me that things went bad ever since Robert left the apartment  they were sharing on Fifty-sixth and Park and went on a white-water-rafting  trip with his stepfather down the Colorado River, leaving his girlfriend,  Lauren, who also lives in the apartment on Fifty-sixth and Park, and Bruce  alone, together, for four weeks. I have never met Lauren but I know what  kind of girl Robert is attracted to and I can picture what she must look  like clearly in my mind and then I'm thinking of the girls who are attracted  to Robert, beautiful and pretending to ignore the fact that Robert, at  twenty-two, is worth about three hundred million dollars, and I picture this  girl, Lauren, lying on Robert's futon, head thrown back, Bruce moving slowly  on top of her, his eyes shut tightly.    Bruce tells me that the affair started a week after Robert left. Bruce and  Lauren had gone to Café Central and after they sent back the food and  decided just to have drinks, they agreed it would be sex only. It would  happen only because Robert had gone out West. They told each other that  there really was no mutual attraction beyond the physical and then they went  back to Robert's apartment and went to bed. This went on, Bruce tells me,  for one week, until Lauren started dating a twenty-three-year-old real  estate tycoon who is worth about two billion dollars.    Bruce tells me that he was not upset by that. But he was "slightly bothered"  the weekend Lauren's brother, Marshall, who just graduated from RISD, came  down and stayed at Robert's apartment on Fifty-sixth and Park. Bruce tells  me that the affair between him and Marshall lasted longer simply because  Marshall stayed longer. Marshall stayed a week and a half. And then Marshall  went back to his ex-boyfriend's loft in SoHo when his ex-boyfriend, a young  art dealer who is worth about two to three million, said he wanted Marshall  to paint three functionless columns in the loft they used to share on Grand  Street. Marshall is worth about four thousand dollars and some change.    This was during the period that Lauren moved all of her furniture (and some  of Robert's) to the twenty-three-year-old real estate tycoon's place at the  Trump Tower. It was also during this period that Robert's two expensive  Egyptian lizards apparently ate some poisoned cockroaches and were found  dead, one under the couch in the living room, its tail missing, the other  sprawled across Robert's Betamax--the big one cost five thousand dollars,  the smaller one was a gift. But since Robert is somewhere in the Grand  Canyon there is no way to get in touch with him. Bruce tells me that this is  why he left the apartment on Fifty-sixth and Park and went to Reynolds'  house, in Los Angeles, on top of Mulholland, while Reynolds, who is worth,  according to Bruce, a couple of falafels at PitaHut and no beverage, is in  Las Cruces.    Lighting a joint, Bruce asks me what I have been doing, what has been  happening here, that he's sorry again. I tell him about readings,  receptions, that Sam slept with an editor from the Paris Review who came up  from New York on Publishers' Weekend, that Madison shaved her head and  Cloris thought she was having chemotherapy and sent all her stories to  editors she knew at Esquire, The New Yorker, Harper's, and that it just made  everyone very blah. Bruce tells me to tell Craig that he wants his guitar  case back. He asked if I'm going to East Hampton to see my parents. I tell  him that since the workshop is just about over and it's almost September, I  don't see the point.    Last summer Bruce stayed with me at Camden and we took the workshop together  and it was the summer Bruce and I would swim in Lake Parrin at night and the  summer he wrote the lyrics to the theme song from "Petticoat Junction" all  over my door because I would laugh whenever he sang the song not because the  song was funny--it was just the way he sang it: face stern yet utterly  blank. That was the summer we went to Saratoga and saw the Cars and, later  that August, Bryan Metro. The summer was drunk and night and warm and the  lake. An image I never saw: my cold hands running over his smooth, wet back.    Bruce tells me to touch myself, right now, in the phone booth. The house I'm  in is silent. I wave away a mosquito. "I can't touch myself," I say. I  slowly sink to the floor still holding the phone.    "Being rich is cool," Bruce says.    "Bruce," I'm saying. "Bruce."    He asked me about last summer. He mentions Saratoga, the lake, a night I  don't remember at a bar in Pittsfield.    I don't say anything.    "Can you hear me?" he's asking.    "Yeah," I whisper.    "Is, like, the connection clear?" he asks.    I'm staring at a drawing: a cup of cappuccino overloaded with foam and  beneath that two words scrawled in black: the future.    "Mellow out," Bruce sighs, finally.    After we hang up I walk back to my room and change. Reynolds picks me up at  seven and as we drive to a small Chinese restaurant on the outskirts of  Camden, he turns the radio down after I say Bruce called and Reynolds asks,  "Did you tell him?" I don't say anything. I found out over lunch today that  Reynolds is currently involved with a townie named Brandy. All I can think  about is Robert on a raft, still somewhere in Arizona, looking at a small  photograph of Lauren but probably not. Reynolds turns the radio up after I  shake my head. I stare out the window. It's the end of summer, 1982.        2    AT THE STILL POINT    "It's been a year," Raymond says. "Exactly."    I have been hoping that no one was going to mention it but I knew as the  evening went on that someone would say something. I just didn't think it was  going to be Raymond. The four of us are at Mario's, a small Italian  restaurant in Westwood Village, and it's a Thursday and late in August. Even  though school doesn't start until early October everyone can tell that  summer is ending, has ended. There is really not a lot to do. A party in Bel  Air that no one expresses too much interest in going to. No concerts. None  of us has a date. In fact, except for Raymond, I don't think any of us sees  anyone. So the four of us--Raymond, Graham, Dirk and myself--decide to go  out to dinner. I don't even realize that it has been a year "exactly" until  I'm in the parking lot next door to the restaurant and almost hit a  tumbleweed that blows in front of me too quickly. I park and sit in my car,  realizing what the date is, and I walk very slowly, very carefully, to the  door of the restaurant and pause a minute before I go in, staring at a menu  encased in glass. I am the last to arrive. No one is saying a whole lot to  anyone else. I try to keep what little conversation there is on other  topics: new Fixx video, Vanessa Williams, how much Ghostbusters is grossing,  maybe what classes we're going to take, making plans for surfing maybe the  next day. Dirk resorts to telling bad jokes we all know and don't think are  funny. We order. The waiter leaves. Raymond speaks.    "It's been a year. Exactly," Raymond says.    "Since what?" Dirk asks uninterestedly.    Graham looks over at me, then down.    No one says anything, not even Raymond, for a long time.    "You know," he finally says.    "No," Dirk says. "I don't."    "Yeah, you do," Graham and Raymond say at the same time.    "No, I really don't," Dirk says.    "Come on, Raymond," I say.    "No, not 'come on, Raymond.' What about 'come on, Dirk'?" Raymond says,  looking at Dirk, who isn't looking at any of us. He just sits there staring  at a glass of water, which has a lot of ice in it.    "Don't be a jerk," he says softly.    Raymond sits back, looking satisfied in a sad sort of way. Graham looks over  at me again. I look away.    "It hasn't seemed that long," Raymond murmurs. "Has it, Tim?"    "Come on, Raymond," I say again.    "Since what?" Dirk says, finally looking at Raymond.    "You know," Raymond says. "You know, Dirk."    "No, I don't," Dirk says. "Why don't you just tell us. Just say it."    "I don't have to say it," Raymond mutters.    "You guys are being total dicks," Graham says, playing with a bread stick.  He offers it to Dirk, who waves it away.    "No, come one, Raymond," Dirk says. "You brought this up. Now say it,  pussy."    "Tell them to shut up or something," Graham says to me.    "You know," Raymond says weakly.    "Shut up," I sigh.    "Say it, Raymond," Dirk dares.    "Since Jamie . . ." Raymond's voice breaks. He grits his teeth, then turns  away from us.    "Since Jamie what?" Dirk asked, his voice rising, getting higher. "Since  Jamie what, Raymond?"    "You guys are being total dicks." Graham laughs. "Why don't you just shut up  or something."    Raymond whispers something that none of us can hear.    "What?" Dirk asks. "What did you say?"    "Since Jamie died," Raymond finally admits, mumbling.    For some reason this shuts Dirk up and he sits back, smiling, as the waiter  places food on the table. I don't want garbanzo beans in my salad and I had  warned the waiter about this when we ordered but it seems inappropriate to  say anything. The waiter places a plate of mozzarella marinara in front of  Raymond. Raymond stares at it. The waiter leaves, returns with our drinks.  Raymond keeps staring at his mozzarella marinara. The waiter asks if  everything is all right. Graham is the only one of us who nods.    "He always ordered this," Raymond says.    "For Christ sakes, mellow out," Dirk says. "Then order something else. Order  the abalone."    "The abalone is very good," the waiter says, before leaving. "So are the  grapes."    "I can't believe you're acting this way," Raymond says.    "What way? That I'm not acting like you?" Dirk picks up his fork, then puts  it back down for the third time.    Raymond says, "That you seem like you just don't give a shit."    "Maybe I don't. Jamie was a jerk. A nice guy but he was a jerk too, okay?"  Dirk says. "It's all over. Don't fucking dwell on it."    "He was one of your best friends," Raymond says accusingly.    "He was a jerk and he was not one of my best friends," Dirk says, laughing.    "You were his best friend, Dirk," Raymond says. "Don't act now like you  weren't."    "He mentioned me on his yearbook page--big deal." Dirk shrugs. "That's about  it." Pause. "He was a little jerk."    "You don't care."    "That he's dead?" Dirk asks. "He's been dead a year, Raymond."    "I can't believe you don't give a shit is all."    "If giving a shit means sitting around here crying like some fag about it .  . ." Dirk sighs, then says, "Look, Raymond. It was a long time ago."    "It's only been a year," Raymond says.    Things I remember about Jamie: getting high with him at an Oingo Boingo  concert in eleventh grade. Drunk on the beach in Malibu at a party at an  Iranian classmate's house. A lame trick he played on some frat guys from USC  at a party in Palm Springs, which actually injured Tad Williams pretty  badly. I don't remember the joke but I remember Raymond, Jamie and myself  stumbling down one of the corridors of the Hilton Riviera, all three of us  stoned, Christmas decorations, someone losing an eyeball, a fire truck  arriving too late, a sign above a door that said "DO NOT ENTER." Doing okay  coke on a yacht with him on prom night and him telling me that I was easily  his best friend. Doing another line off a black enamel table, I had asked  about Dirk, about Graham, Raymond, a couple of movie stars. Jamie said he  liked Dirk and Graham and that he didn't like Raymond a whole lot. "Dude is  bogus" were his exact words. Another line and he said that he understood me  or something like that and I did another line and believed him because it is  easier to move through the motions than not to.    One night late in August, on the way to Palm Springs, Jamie tried to light a  joint and either lost control of the car because he was speeding or had a  blowout and the BMW flew off the freeway and he was killed instantly. Dirk  had been following him. They were going to spend the weekend before Labor  Day at Jeffrey's parents' place in Rancho Mirage and they had left a party  we had all been at in Studio City and it was Dirk who had pulled Jamie's  crushed, bloody body from the car and who had waved down some guy who was on  his way to Las Vegas to build a tennis court and the guy drove to the  nearest hospital and an ambulance arrived seventy minutes later and Dirk had  sat there in the desert staring at the dead body. Dirk never spoke about it  a lot, just little details he gave us the week after it happened: the way  the BMW tumbled, rolled across sand, a smashed cactus, how the upper part of  Jamie's body burst through the windshield, the way Dirk pulled him out, laid  him down, looked through Jamie's pockets for another joint. I have been  tempted a lot of times to go out to where it happened and check it out but I  don't go out to Palm Springs anymore because whenever I'm there I feel very  wasted and it's a drag.    "I just can't believe you guys don't care," Raymond is saying.    "Raymond," Dirk and I say in unison.    "It's just that there's nothing we can do," I finish.    "Yeah." Dirk shrugs. "What can we do?"    "They're right, Raymond," Graham says. "Things are blurry."    "In fact I feel like a big smudge," Dirk says.    I look over at Raymond and then back at Dirk.    "He's dead and all but that doesn't mean he wasn't a jerk," Dirk says,  pushing his plate away.								
									 Copyright © 1995 by Bret Easton Ellis. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.