P E*R SPECTI VE ,S AlKp s o, THE BARGAIN ... Donald LaBadie N A WAY, since it happened after he had stopped speaking to me, I don't feel quite so much this sensation of not being in the right which is probably, after all, only wonder and bewilder- ment. He lowered his eyes every time he met me in the hall those last two weeks and hugged the side of the wall as if I might reach out and touch him. In a sense he cut me off from his life so that what happened later is really no part of me and my life is going on just as before. Still though my notebook is on the desk, my Pathology text to the side; my suit, my tie, and my shirt exchanged for jeans and a sweater; the sum of my actions for this day in agreement with my purpose tomorrow; I can't work as I must work. It's the same feeling I had when we came through the cafeteria line togeth- er and I took the plate with the most meat. For a little while after I'd feel that things weren't as they should be, I'd wonder if he'd noticed, I'd feel that I'd hand him the damn plate if he wanted it; then I'd get my balance again and I'd say once or twice to osy- self, "What the hell, it's a small thing!" Then I could continue. That's how I feel now, only no matter what I say I know that everything's not in order, that there's something I don't see and I've got to see it, I've got to find what to say. The magic word, twice to myself, and then I'll go on. It's really my own fault for trying to be a friend to anyone like Peter, get- ting him a room in the house, taking him home with me at Christmas. It's just what mother said, my pity for ti- mid people, for people who need to be liked, and it would have taken a saint to fill his need, so that I neglect my own direction. Then that I should have thought so highly of him afterward, thought that he had a fine mind. But that's my way, thinking people are so much, wanting them to be so much, and then to see them in the end. That's the world and I never could accept it. I should have known from what Jack Levine told me, what he said about Peter when Peter was moving away from him to come here. He told me Pet- er was cracked, but Jack was a selfish lout, who only could think of his sports and his games. He and Peter were good friends at first. It wasn't like Peter at all, getting so interested in sports, do- ing just what Jack said as if something depended upon agreenient, and then in the end he wouldn't speak to Jack just as he finally wouldn't speak to me, I don't know what I don't see about Peter that would give the answer. He was interested in medicine. That was something I, gave to him, his desire to be a doctor. Of course it was never clear on his part, that habit he had of trying to relate science to some outer social ideal, taking it away from what it really was, a thing in itself. It was such a confused idea, that science should assume social responsibility and still remain objective, but he clung to it for a long time. It sprang from a theory that his friend, Dino, had worked out while he was at the other school. It seemed to be fixed in his mind like the remnants of some relig- ious teaching, as if he might have memorized it, and I suppose it was given added strength by the fact that Dino had died. That was the reason that he had come to the university, but be never said much about his friend. There was only this idea when I first met him and it kept him from doing a good job on his ground work in Zoology. I remember once at a party to which Marjorie had invited him at my sug- gestion that he interrupted our dis- cussion and :began to ask us all if we didn't feel sonse social responsibility a future scientists. It wasn't like Peter to do anything like that, and I never would have asked Marjorie to ask him if I'd known. Now that I think of it, it was the only thing on which he really ever asserted himself. He sat on the edge of the couch and kept on arguing until it became private. It was just like babbling and everyone was embarrassed because no one agreed with or even fully understood what he was saying. So finally one of the fel- lows began to argue back with him and then we all joined in and he stop- ped talking. That seemed to convince him and he said several times, "Yes, I guess you're right, that's right," and he smiled apologetically to everyone in the room. He was quiet the rest of the evening, but he drove Marjorie crazy, following her around, asking her and record. What is is, and one phenom- enon is as natural as the next through its very existence." For a moment he looked bewildered. Then he came back. "But if you're having a social system everything must take a social line." "Already you're taking a viewpoint, and that's not science," I argued. De- spite the fact that I spoke to him then as clearly and as definitely as J ever had he didn't seem to comprehend what{ I was saying. Finally I became tired of the discussion and left the room in irritation. I had just begun to study again when he knocked at my door. From the man* ner in which he entered I gathered that he had overestimated the decree of my anger. "I'm sorry," he said, "I've been thinking about what you said and lack of reaction, the dependability of his being there in the chair, the smiles and questions which came to lack spon- taneity, the repetition of my opinions and an almost mocking agreement. He spoke little, yet ultimately that was bet- ter than his not speaking at all. It was during that time that I first met Joan. When I introducedher to Peter she expressed what was already in mys mind, that he was an uninteresting per- son and a waste of time. He went with us to have coffee one night and spent the whole evening smiling when we were looking his way and looking lost the rest of the time. I couldn't stand 'that look, there was something of water about it. It made me want to push him into the dirt; I began to de- test him then. I stopped studying at home and was curt and indifferent in my relations with him. But this only produced an increasing sweetness on his part, an increasing attention to niceness that infuriated me. He must have under- stood finally because he ceased waiting up for me at night. I felt guilty at first; then I stopped seeing him alto- gether. Feeling ashamed one night I knocked at his door but he wasn't in. The Dean's office called the same week to find why he hadn't been attending classes. One rainy Sunday night when Joan had gone home for the weekend I no- ticed a light under his door and knocked, intending to ask him"to come to the movies with me. He admitted me and motioned to a seat. I beggn to speak to him about the weather when he interrupted me. The first sound came out slowly and between each word he hesitated as if it were an ef- fort to produce speech "I'm - - almost - - - sure --- you're -- - wrong - - - about - - - science. - - - Not - - - al- ways - - - but - - - sometimes - - - when - - - I think - - - of what - - - Dino - -- said - -- I - -- think -- - - - - you're - - - wrong." I was so embarrased by his difficulty that I did not let him go on. I talked to him quietly, tried to find out what was the matter, insisted that he go to the hospital. He relaxed, sat still in what seemed to be the beginning of an unending silence, and then began to cry. As I left the room he called to me in the same voice, "You're - - - not - - - wrong," He did not go to the hospital as I had told him to do. For a few days I continued in my renewed friendliness, but I felt with each succeeding day as if I were being drawn into' something unpleasant until my indifference took hold again, this time naturally. I sup- pose he must have noticed. He came into my room three nights, then he did not come again. Just before I went home on the weekend I encountered him in the hall. He lowered his eyes and turned his head slightly to the side. When I came back he would no longer speak to me. Two weeks ago Mrs. Partridge asked me as I came in one night if I would knock on his door and ask him to come down to see her in regard to pay- ing his rent. When I did so he opened the door slightly; but did not motion for me to come in. I told him what Mrs. Partridge had asked. Then I asked him myself if he had dropped out of school. He did not answer, so I asked him again. He hesitated, then went to his desk and drew out paper and pencil and wrote three words, handing the paper to me, "I cannot speak." I tried to question him, to persuade him to go to the doctor now. He stared at me; he seemed to be agitated by some great struggle in that instant. Then suddenly he brushed past me and (Conlinued on Pes Eight) if he could help, if he could do any- thing. That was the way he was when he went home with me at Christmas. He was timid about coming downstairs and when he did he was so nice to my family that they felt strained. Mother became rather attached to him finally. On Christmas Eve when we were all sitting around the tree he turned to her and said, "You don't know how I appreciate being here. This is the first Christmas Eve I've spent with anyone in a long time. When I was little my mother always had a tree and we were very happy." I thought Mother was going to cry because Jim is overseas and that's changed her somewhat. She always wanted him to come down after that. The last time I had to tell her why he didn't. I only know that he wanted to be-' come a doctor and that this idea about social responsibility confused him so that he couldn't study, or even plan his future career at first. He never tired of trying to explain to me, it seemed an urgency, something that he should have to get out. A week after the party .he ventured again. "But," I said to him, "science has no -Marion Carleton I think you're right about science being detached from the social sphere." I shrugged my shoulders to indicate that it really meant nothing, but I was hap- py that he had at last emerged from confusion. After that we settled down to being friends in earnest. Every night he came to my room with his books and we would study together. At ten we stop- ped for music and I made tea on the grill. Then I talked to him about my day in school, how the dissections were coming, and if we had time I engaged in a little philosophical speculation. On any winter evening I had only to look up and he was there. Sometimes, how- ever, when he didn't notice that I was watching I would see that he was no longer looking at his book, but just sitting there staring at the floor. I felt that he would reach out at any moment and try to grasp something. There was something that he had lost and even then was on the point of re- gaining. When I would say, "What are you thinking about?" he would turn, a quick smile rising to his face, and an- swer, "Nothing, just memorizing." With that he would run back to the book. Just two months ago I began to be .. o, th ti .. he o--L-le bu;sL , ith his