16B - The Michigan Daily Literary Magazine - Thursday, March 12, 1998 w 9 SPACE Continued from Page 15B "Do I know you?" "I'm Darren. Good to meet you." He reached out his hand again, and I let it hang there, suspended halfway between his bed and mine. We stared at each other for a long time before he looked away. I didn't know any Darrens. And then he started convulsing, and it all came back to me. The tombstone and the two obnoxious women and Elvis' face everywhere and the guy who fell out of the crowd, shaking on the ground at my feet. This guy. And here he was convulsing again. I panicked and pulled myself up, fumbling for the buzzer to call the nurse, and then he stopped shak- ing and looked over at me with a big grin on his face. "Thanks for helping me out earlier today. So are you a doctor or just some random passerby? Do you visit Graceland often, or was this your first time? I hope this wasn't your first time because it really is a beautiful place, and I hate to think that I may have spoiled your first trip to Graceland." "I ... am a professor of medical ethics at Vanderbilt." Darren was eating his peas again. "Do you need me to call a nurse?" "What for?" "You just had another seizure." "Obviously not a doctor. Random passerby then, huh?" "I teach medical ethics at Vanderbilt University." And then he started shaking again, and then he stopped and laughed at me, and then he was shaking again, and then he stopped, and then again and this time he didn't stop, and I was so angry because even when he wasn't laughing at me it was like he was laughing at me. "What's wrong with you?" Darren was out of breath, tears were running down his face. He stopped shak- ing finally and straightened himself out. "I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Don't call the nurse, I'm okay. Would you like some more peas?" He held his bowl out to me and I just stared at him lying there in his blue gown and his big grin and his bowl of hospital peas. I wasn't quite sure what to say. "Are you epileptic?" "No are you?" "No why would I be?" "Why would I be?" "I don't know" "Neither do I." "You're the one with the seizures." "No, I'm not." "Yes, you are." "I've never had a seizure in my life." "Those weren't seizures?" I pulled myself up in my bed and looked over at him. "Uh-uh." "And that wasn't a seizure in Meditation Garden." "Nope." I could feel the pea now smushed up against the inner part of my thigh, and I was going to reach down and scoop it up, but I didn't, because I didn't want to break Darren's concentration. The idea of it, though, smushed up against my leg like that and smearing green pea goop all over the white sheets made me a little uneasy. "I don't understand." Darren started singing. "Do your ears hang low do they wobble to and fro? Can you tie 'em in a knot? Can you tie 'em in a bow?" I didn't know what to do. I didn't want to stare at this man who was quite possi- bly a lunatic, but I was afraid to look away because it felt like he was singing to me. "Can you throw 'em o'er your shoul- der like a continental soldier do your ears ..." He was holding the remote control and he reached out and tapped the top of my head. "Hang ..." And he tapped my head again. "Low." I just stared at him, jaw hanging open. Darren was smiling again, and I was worried that he would start shaking, but he didn't. Oprah was breaking to a com- mercial, and Darren threw the remaining peas at the TV screen. "I really hate commercials." He point- ed the remote at the TV and flicked it off. I looked away. He continued, "I like spectacle." "Okay." "Okay, so, I was standing there over Elvis' grave with 411 those pathetic peo- ple weeping over his tombstone where he probably isn't even buried anyway because he's probably living under an assumed name in a mansion in some third-world country in Central America where he owns a factory where the peo- ple of the village all work for 30 cents an hour making Elvis bumper stickers that are sold in the States to help make his fortune and support his gluttony. I'm surrounded by these people and I think to myself, What if I died right now. Would they even notice? Would they realize that someone else besides Elvis existed in the world and would they try to help me or would they just stand back and sip their Elvis Presley Soda Sippers and watch? So I decided to see what hap- pened." I thought of Gloria sipping on her Elvis Presley Soda Sipper and I don't think she would've noticed that a man was convulsing over Elvis' grave, unless it was to complain that someone was .obstructing her view. For a minute I thought Darren had a point, but then I realized what he was saying. "You faked the whole thing?" "You could say that." "I ..." "What." I couldn't believe what was about to stay in one of their empty rooms. They opened their doors andshowed me in. I was a priest for four days. What do you do with yourself Johnny Ethics? Do you mind if I call you Johnny Ethics? It's kinda catchy don't you think? Stop suck- ing the dick of The Man. I had a dream last night that all these people were naked standing on a slab of gray stone against a tall, gray, stone wall. There was sun coming from either side and every- one turned to the wall and tried to squeeze into it but there was nowhere to go. They all had your face, Johnny. Different bodies - same face. Different bodies - same face. Listen to Oprah. She knows what it's all about." Darren flicked the TV on again. The door swung open and in marched Gloria, Twinkie in one hand, Wet-Nap in the other. She had been visiting the vending machines. I'd almost forgotten about her. Darren pretended to sleep, and I was left there with Oprah and hospital peas. I didn't know quite how to explain any of it. Gloria sat down on the edge of my bed and petted me. She said she was so proud of the way I handled the situation in Graceland, and that she wished she could've been there to see me conscious. She must've just returned after I passed out. come out of my mouth. "Do you realize "Honey, why are there peas every- how horribly wrong of a thing that is to where?" do?" I wanted to tell her about Darren, and "Oh, listen to the big ethics professor." how he wasn't really sleeping but just "I can't believe that." I was on a roll. pretending to be asleep, and that he was "Nobody asked you to help. You never just pretending to have a seizure, and would've even known the difference if that he threw peas all over the room, and you didn't pass out and wind up here he threw one at me and now it was warm next to me. I was just going about my and mushy beneath my leg. I wanted to business. It's a kind of life philosophy, tell her that I hate Elvis, and that I pur- you know?" posefully listened to the tour in "No, I don't know." Japanese, and that Oprah could provide "I was in Chicago last week." more entertainment interviewing nar- "You faked the whole thing?" coleptics than the entire mansion of "I was a priest in Chicago. All I had to some dead fat guy who should've do was show up at this convent in stopped singing 20 years before he died, Bucktown - St. Hedgwick's. I rented a and that Twinkies made me want to priest's costume from a shop in the throw up, and would she please get off Loop. I showed up at the door of these my bed because the plasticy-rubbery nuns and spoke in broken English. I told sound she made every time she leaned them basically that I was visiting from over to stroke my head made me crazy. the Czech Republic for a convention of But I didn't. And I don't know why I did- Eastern European priests and I didn't n't but I didn't. Maybe it was because I speak English. I told them the hotel lost felt like Darren was still laughing at me, my reservation. I asked them if I could even as he pretended to sleep. I looked up at Gloria and imagined someone else's face where hers should have been. Then I realized that this was S "Best of Ann Arbor" Poll nothing new. I realized that if I closed my eyes, I wouldn't have been able to see what Gloria's face really looked like because I'd imagined it to look like (regular $12.00) something else for so long. Not that she wasn't beautiful, because she was. Not that I didn't love her, because I did. It ointments are necessary. was just a game I played. When I didn't answer Gloria's ques- tion about the peas, she screwed her face .versity * 668-8488 up and leaned over me. I felt her breast drag across my stomach, and I could just barely smell the perfume I'd bought for her the year before, my crummy excuse for Graceland that didn't really satisfy her, although she pretended that it did. "Here, have some Twinkie." And she stuck it up in to my face. The sweet smell of Cream Filling in Golden Sponge Cake mixed with the looming odor of rubbing alcohol made me a little queasy. I ate it anyway, though, and I smiled. "We can go back tomorrow," she said. "The people at Graceland were so nice. They gave us two free passes and an Elvis tote bag for me and a paperweight for you. He sings when you press his head." She pulled the Elvis Paperweight out of the Elvis Tote Bag, and she pressed its head, and it sang. "You ain't nothin' but a hound dog." "That's great, sweetie. It'll go well in my office" "Cryin' all the time." "I'm glad you like it." "Could you get off my bed now please?" I didn't mean for it to come out that way. "I mean, I think I'm ready if you want to help me get my things together." Gloria left to get the nurse. I lay there, alone again with Darren, and I waited for him to say something, but he didn't. I waited for him to throw something at me, but he didn't. Some of my things were on the chair next to my bed. I picked up the copy of Kierkegaard with Welcome to Graceland stuck in the middle. I leafed through the pages and came across another line. "So it is that everyone knew once in his early youth that there were so many beautiful things in existence, but the place he did not know definitely." I scribbled it on the back of the brochure, beneath the other two. I sat up and plant- ed my bare feet on the floor. It was cold, and it made the hairs on my legs stand on end. I could hear Darren breathing behind me. It wasn't the breathing of someone who was asleep. I- wanted to turn around and look at him, but I didn't. With one corner of my hospital gown I wiped the Twinkie from my face, and with the other corner I reached down and wiped the pea out from beneath my leg. I pulled the gown over my head and let it drop to the floor. I sat there naked for a minute, listening to people talking out- side my door and carts rolling down the hall and Darren breathing. I sat there lis- tening to the breathing of someone who I knew was awake but pretended not to be, and I felt like a kid again. Playing games. Saying prayers. Kneeling in the confessional. Pretending not to breathe. Afraid to disturb the silence. I closed my eyes, and my face was warm. -Aric Knuth is an LSA junior and English major from Oscoda, Mich. Four Time WINNER- "Best Haircut" in Michigan Daily' Save $2 on your next haircut Simply bring this coupon to Supercuts. As usual, no apj Nexxus " Paul Mitchell KMS Products 715 N. Uni Open 7 Days But come in soon, this offer ends 5/31/98 Good at participating shops. Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer. SUWOUT5 E VE~R Y TI1M r HOW DO YOU WANT' YOUR HAIRCUT? Celebrated, anticipated, award-winning Italian cuisine. Northern Italian foods and wines a served with flair and excitement. Main floor and balcony seating. 326 S. Main St. Downtown Ann ArborI 663-5555