something like that if it were my son.â
âOf course you wouldnât,â I scoffed. âWhatâs the point? She told you because she couldnât stand knowing it herself. She had to dilute the nastiness.â
Sally blinked. âIf she had any inner strength, she wouldnât have told me.â
âOf course. She has no inner strength.â I paused, then spat it out. âSheâs not quality. â
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A COUPLE OF GUYS from Timboâs old dorm had been at the funeral, so I assumed they knew. The word must have spread through the dorm, then leaked onto campus through girlfriends, classmates, friends of friends, acquaintances, professors. I heard about it in psychology class, only the ring had metamorphosed into a whole contraption, a blowup thing like a blood-pressure cuff, and the accident had been solely Timboâs fault.
âGuess the moral is, donât diddle and drive,â someone said.
âShows what a frustrated id will do.â
âSad. Did he have a girlfriend?â
âYeah, but . . .â Laughter and shaking of heads. My face blazed, I bit the inside of my cheek. These were my classmates? These were people I was supposed to feel close to? Iâd thought this college was supposed to be liberal.
In our dorm there were debates in the halls. Both males and females participated. What, really, was wrong with a penis ring? What was wrong with masturbation? Didnât everybody masturbate? Should the fact that Timbo was wearing a masturbatory aide diminish his death in any way? The debates often deteriorated, going from principles of freedom into talk of things the ancient Greeks did, or the Chinese metal masturbation balls mentioned in Our Bodies, Ourselves, or the true meaning of the lyrics to âLayla,â which ostensibly no woman understood. Eventually, people dissolved into their rooms, less edified than stirred up.
âI hate that,â Sally said. âI donât want to hear about masturbation every moment of my life.â For a while, to escape the talk, she took a circuitous pathâthrough a fire escape door and stairwellâto and from our room. Then one day she got angry. She held her head up and walked right past them.
âNobody ever says anything to you, do they?â I asked.
âAre you kidding?â Sally answered, her tone scathing. âThey wouldnât have the balls.â
Balls? I thought, smiling to myself. Did Sally really say âballsâ?
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MARGARETâMY FRIEND with no cultural referencesâaccompanied Sally and me to the Campus Restaurant for breakfast. âDo you like bacon?â Margaret asked Sally, then quickly put her hand over her mouth. âOh. Iâm sorry.â
âWhat are you talking about?â Sally said, although Iâm sure she knew.
âClare told me youâre Jewish,â Margaret said in a confiding tone.
âAnd?â
Margaret seemed to realize at this point that sheâd said something wrong, and her voice took on a mild whininess Iâd heard before. âWell, pork, pork,â she said, and went on about the Bible and its dietary laws, which was something she knew about from Sholom Aleichem and Fiddler on the Roof. I felt sorry for her. It had been hard to be raised in Guatemala with nobody around but missionary Baptists and native Catholics, no TV, no movies, no cosmetic ads. Sheâd never heard of Max Factor!
âHalf the students at this college are Jewish,â Sally said. âDo you see people eating bacon in the cafeterias? Do you see many men wearing yarmulkes?â
Margaret believed more in the images she got from movies and TV and reading than in what she could look around and see. This was her sublime goofiness, one of the things that made her, for me, such fun to be with. But I could see it drove Sally crazy.
âPeople away at college are known to deny their backgrounds,â
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