A Disorder Peculiar to the Country (27 page)

“Come on, Marshall-man, give it to me straight. I don’t do nuance.”

Eduardo had joined the company shortly after it had been reorganized, and he had taken on responsibilities vital to getting it back on track. There had been setbacks. He still wore his hair long and affected a laid-back disposition, but the strain showed in his face and in occasional outbursts of testiness. Also, he was breaking up with his wife.

Marshall said, “It doesn’t work. At least not now, not in the current config.”

“They had a demo for the board last month. I was there. It worked fine.”

“In a very controlled environment, and even then only sixty-three percent of the time. The lab thinks we should hold off—”

“Nah, nah, nah,” Eduardo said vehemently. “It’s too late for that. The board’s seen it, the banks have seen it. We have an equity deal in two weeks. If we don’t recapitalize now, the company’s finished.”

“But if it doesn’t work—”

“It’ll work. Have faith, Marshall.”

Marshall nodded in agreement, but perhaps not as vigorously as he could have. Eduardo tightened his lips and stared at him for a moment.

“Marshall, have faith. Have faith in the people who sweat blood every day to keep this company alive. They come in weekends, they come in nights, they don’t take vacations. They don’t do this for me or for the shareholders. They do it for their
families, to put bread on the table. And they do it because they’re optimists. They believe we can overcome these challenges. They’re people who believe in the future. We need people like that. Do you understand me?”

“Yes, of course,” Marshall said, now fully earnest. He put the papers back in his briefcase, trying to dismiss their ill tidings. As if toward the nurturing warm light of the sun, both he and Eduardo turned back to the TV, where MSNBC had just gone to Tehran. The Iranians had rushed into the streets to cheer the news from Syria. Some of the women were flinging off their chadors.

 

THAT SPRING
no one wanted to turn away from his television set. The handsome Wharton-trained freedom fighter who had captured Saddam took leadership of a provisional Iraqi government that won broad support from Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds. At Wharton he had dated Jewish girls. Nearly all the coalition troops left Iraq, seen off by cheering flag-waving Iraqis who lined the thoroughfares to Baghdad Airport. The Israelis and the PLO reached a territorial settlement and an agreement to share sovereignty in Jerusalem. And then, just as summer was about to begin, Osama bin Laden was found huddled on a filthy rug in a cave located in the lawless, mountainous tribal lands on the Iraqi-Afghan border.

“They got him!” Eduardo’s secretary shrieked, running out into the cubicle area where most of the division’s employees worked. She stood in the center of the room, pumping her fists above her head, and shouted again, “They got him!”

Everyone knew who she meant. Marshall and his colleagues rushed to the windows, crying gleefully. Across the way in other offices people cheered and raised their arms too. Shouts rose from the street ten stories below, and cars and taxis sounded their horns all at once.

In Marshall’s office his co-workers were hugging and slapping high fives, with grins on every face. A young woman in a light summer dress embraced Marshall and kissed him. She knew he had been at the twin towers. “You must be thrilled,” she said, leaving the imprint of her body on his as she pulled away. It was the first time in years that he had been kissed by a woman who was not, say, his mother.

Abandoning their briefcases, his colleagues left the office in a hurry. Marshall followed them out, and once they encountered congestion in the elevator lobby, they went down the stairs. The stairwell was jammed too, everyone patient while they congratulated each other and shook hands. They filed out onto Broadway. Already the crowds had spilled into the street. Marshall knew exactly where they were going.

This time they headed downtown, this time with their shoes on their feet. Broadway had been cleared of traffic except for a line of fire trucks, the firemen blowing kisses to women and men. Some of the firemen wept as they waved placarded pictures of their fallen comrades. People in the street pounded the sides of the vehicles, cheering, and reached up to squeeze the firemen’s hands and forearms. An American flag flew from nearly every operable window of every office tower. Just-shredded confetti fell in a multicolored blizzard. The mob kicked it up again.

They passed City Hall, slowing as the streets around Ground Zero filled with people coming from every direction, up from the Battery and along Park Row, overflowing into City Hall Park. At Vesey they pushed toward the construction site, shuffling down the block to Church Street, stopping at the intersection to gaze at the infinite vacancy that rose to the heavens from the pit that went down to bedrock. Humanity rebounded against him and gradually spread out around the sixteen acres’ perimeter, flush against the chain-link fence.

News helicopters sliced the air overhead. Air horns tooted
while American anthems were sung by men and women who had come to New York from every country of the world. Marshall sang too, “God Bless America” and “O Beautiful for Spacious Skies” and “My Country, ’Tis of Thee,” squeezed between a young sari-wrapped woman and a tall man in dreads. All around him schoolchildren bumped each other with their backpacks, giggling. They sang and so did these suited businessmen and this gaggle of big-haired young women in heels and an old guy in a bomber jacket and another guy and another guy and an elderly woman who had come out with a walker. Marshall felt a huge emotion surging within him: it was relief at bin Laden’s capture, of course, but also sudden love for his country, at that moment an honest, unalloyed, uncompromised white-hot passion. He hadn’t realized that he knew so many words to so many patriotic songs. His face was wet, soaked.

“Daddy!”

It was Victor, just a few feet away. He broke out of Joyce’s grip and rushed to embrace his father at the knees. Joyce had both kids with her, both of them wearing their “Death to Terrorists!” shirts. They held chocolate ice cream cones. Surprised and embarrassed, Joyce nearly stumbled; Marshall nearly reached out to catch her. “Hi,” he said. They eyed each other without actually making eye contact.

She replied, “Hi.”

Victor said, “They captured Osama bin Laden.”

“I know, honey, that’s wonderful.”

Viola offered him a bite of her ice cream cone. The crowd was halted now, too packed for anyone to move farther, too packed for Marshall and Joyce to separate. He felt her body against his, warmed by the sentiments of the day. New Yorkers occupied the streets in all directions as far as the eye could see, faces and bodies scintillating blocks away like the skin of a snake, leaves in a windblown tree, ticker tape. Their songs
thundered against the high walls of the boulevards. Strangers embraced. Others patted backs and squeezed shoulders. Someone drummed on bongos. In the distance: the report of firecrackers. Marshall bit into the ice cream. The late-afternoon light was golden, molten now, pouring across the glass and stone buildings arrayed around the site, every surface incandescent. Before him the vastness of the emptiness of the hole in the city was inflamed with human noise and aspiration. An arrow’s point of sparrows lifted from a nearby roof and wheeled into the deepening blue unopposed. The moment would last forever, or until everything contained within it was completely destroyed.

About the Author

K
EN
K
ALFUS
is the author of a novel,
The Commissariat of Enlightenment
, and the short-story collections
Thirst
and
Pu-239 and Other Russian Fantasies
, all of which were named
New York Times
Notable Books. His writing has appeared in the
New York Review of Books, Harper’s
,
Tin House
, and
Bomb.
He lives in Philadelphia with his wife and daughter.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

P
RAISE
FOR
A Disorder Peculiar to the Country

“Kalfus skewers the pieties surrounding 9/11, but, having set his black comedy in the shadow of that national trauma, he reverently charts the powerful sway that world events briefly held over the lives of individual Americans.”


The New Yorker

“Savagely hilarious…. This is a scathing portrait of self-absorbed people misunderestimating the complexity and malignancy of motives that drive unfolding events.”


Elle

“A surprising new novel…. Unlike so many satirical novelists at work today, Kalfus doesn’t pull his punches. From the very first scene, this is a bracing book…. This is a novel about how people chafe against the huge, un-sentient brush of history.”


Mineapolis Star Tribune

“Kalfus’ new novel [is] like a fever dream of recent events…. Through the interbleeding of public and private story lines and his lampooning approach, Kalfus [is] freeing the way we think about September 11…. If hyperbole can be weaponized anywhere in literature, it is here.”


Los Angeles Times Book Review

“A stinging new fiction…. Kalfus recalibrates all the standard divorce tropes into something sharper than that provided by more-innocent, or at least more-isolationist, divorce fare.”


New York
magazine

“Ken Kalfus has produced perhaps the most penetrating response to September 11 and its aftermath to date: a satire on the psychological and domestic effects of the current state of perpetual conflict.”


The Guardian
(UK)

“Hilarious…. The novel miraculously manages to avoid patness or bombast. As in Jay McInerney’s recent
The Good Life
, Kalfus puts 9/11 up against the steel-plated narcissism of New Yorkers—with very different, and very funny, results.”


Publishers Weekly

“Given the hallowed space September 11 occupies in our public consciousness, it is refreshing to read about the visceral reactions of flawed people…. A sly moralist, Kalfus sends up the ways many Americans responded to the attacks, and with each unexpected snicker a veritable sandbag drops from the book’s weighty themes.”


Time Out
(New York)

“Kalfus avoids the easier targets and more obvious ironies of the era. His characters and situations are vivid and idiosyncratic enough to be wholly and embarrassingly recognizable to anyone who experienced impulses unbecoming to citizens of ‘a nation challenged.’”


Newsday
(New York)

“The most original novel to be written about America’s moral climate in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks…. Kalfus is the first to take on the clichéd idea that the terrorists really did inaugurate a new order.”


The Times Literary Supplement
(London)

“Kalfus is an impressively penetrating and precise novelist…. He kept me turning the pages by the forceful grace of his writing and insights.”


Seattle Times

“Droll, well-observed, ferocious, intelligent, morsels of bravura linked with a communicatve energy, here may be the best possible 9/11 novel.”


Le Figaro

Kalfus’ talent for description is undeniable. His portrayal of the collapse of the towers as seen from within is utterly enthralling.”


Financial Times

“Vivid…. Entertaining…. Like Don DeLillo in
White Noise,
Kalfus is using the misfortunes of one family as a pathway into the national malaise.”

—Craig Seligman, Bloomberg

“Kalfus boldly positions these characters…. He succeeds because of sharp, sometimes scathing writing and observations, and a certain fearlessness attached to his subject matter.”


Pittsburgh Tribune Review

“Truly imaginative…. An extremely satisfying novel that both familiarizes a disorienting world and helps us see it in a new light…. An entertaining black comedy.”


News & Observer
(Raleigh, N.C.)

“The most original [of 9/11] novels, if not the most gentle…. A style of studied dryness that raises emotion, a subtle evocation of a couple’s breakup, a prodigious description of a country ‘destabilized beyond repair,’ this is a book that perfectly balances its novelistic and polemical parts.”

—Le Monde

“Strangely compelling…. Kalfus is a talent to watch…. What is most enjoyable about this novel is the verve and swagger with which Kalfus writes.”


Sunday Telegraph
(UK)

ALSO BY KEN KALFUS

The Commissariat of Enlightenment

Pu-239 and Other Russian Fantasies

Thirst

A DISORDER PECULIAR TO THE COUNTRY
. Copyright © 2006 by Ken Kalfus. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub © Edition JANUARY 2009 ISBN: 9780061856341

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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