Jonas Agonistes Chapter 1: Like a Novel by Robbe-Grillet
I avoided bourbon but not scotch. Scotch. I found it helped me sleep, but upon further discrimination and many scientific trials I decided it helped me do something like sleep. I pushed it aside. I even poured out one of the half-full bottles in my drawer. Not the other one, though. Just one.
Two weeks before, I left the Corps. Unwillingly, grudgingly, silently, at my own request, but I left. I resigned. Not in disgrace, but "don't show your face around here again, Buddy" was the implication. For about a fortnight, I toasted my discharge in a motel in Jacksonville, NC. I stayed at a terrible place, drinking more of that scotch, wishing I had a friend, finding one in the bottle. I was not suicidal. I did what we all should do when we have no one to go to. And there was no one.
The major warned me. "You are a candidate for all sorts of neurotic behaviors, Lieutenant. Depression, anxiety, alcoholism, fantasies... Don't give in to them. You did what you could. You did right. The system failed you. Hell, the system eats up moral decisions, and doesn't even spit them out. Talk to that priest friend of yours. Get a girlfriend. If they can handle it, talk to your parents. Get a counselor or a therapist. But remember: al Gatar is off limits. Al Gatar is classified. They are already considering declassifying it, so it should come off the list. But not yet. Soon, maybe."
For two years Major Marx had steered me through a pseudo-legal system of innuendo, implication, half-truth, and exhaustive restatement, threat, cynicism, and frustration. Two years repeating the same story, recounting the same action on the same day, over and over while my interrogators looked for a flaw, for a changed word or idea, a discrepancy. I was the main character in a novel by Robbe-Grillet, each chapter repeated with only a small change here, a nip and tuck there. Finally the major brokered a decision that the Corps would NOT pursue charges like mutiny or murder or disobedience of orders. In return, all I had to do was resign, accept an honorable discharge-and get the hell out of our Marine Corps. So I did. It was probably for the best. I was starting to smell like Camp Lejeune, and Camp Lejeune smelled like Dewar's.
And I thought Dewar's smelled more and more like kerosene.
So I drove home to Mom and Dad, taking my time, using secondary roads, eating in little diners with girls waiting on me, listening to their southern accents, ordering grits and ham and greasy burgers. I avoided thought about my future. I wore civilian clothes, but my high and tight gave me away for a serviceman and especially a Marine. My Mustang was only two and a half years old, paid off, and worked wonders for my attitude, keeping me on an even keel. It was my most important possession, except for that Dewar's half bottle in the trunk. I found a little, run-down motel along the highway just across the Ohio as it was getting dark and I put in. I could have made it all the way home, but I was in no hurry. No one knew I was coming. I was a low expectation.
I could not like-sleep without the Dewar's, but I didn't drink it anyway. There were too many arms and legs in my mind, too many women in burkas clutching babies, two too many dead Marines. I think I needed a sleeping pill. How do I get that? Walk into a doctor's office and say, hey, I got some people killed and I'd like some pills to make me forget? Or maybe I could just say, I'm having trouble sleeping and Dewar's doesn't do it for me anymore, Doc. Can I get a pill? Ambien? Trazodone? Heroin?
I didn't think he'd give me the opium but I had a shot at the others. I lay there thinking I was the victim of raised standards. I used to think like-sleep was good enough, and now it wasn't. Perhaps I should reconsider? That scotch was in the trunk, not far at all. But it was 7 in the morning, I was four or five hours from home, from Mom, from my birthplace, from Father Rick, from Jane Austen nΓ©e Miller, the prettiest girl in the ninth grade. Eighth grade too. Dad was there. Maybe I had friends I couldn't remember. The scotch was sounding better all of a sudden. I think the major was correct: I was definitely a candidate for neuroses.
I pulled into the driveway at home about 3 in the afternoon. I hadn't touched the scotch, which felt like a victory, if a sad one. The sun was out, it was cool but not cold, most of the leaves were still on the trees, the house and street and neighborhood all looked the same. I had last been here two-no, two and a half years ago, just before I deployed with my platoon to Afghanistan.
I had seen Mom and Dad upon my ignominious return, alone. They met my plane, but I had been in handcuffs at that point. I was allowed to say hi, kiss mom, and head to the brigα·« to await a hearing. I was restricted to Camp Lejeune once a judge got me out of the brig, pending results of the investigation since there were no charges. We went to the beach a few times, the O club, but then they had gone home and I had entered the Long Winter of My Discontent. Now I was home. No job. No prospects. Out of jail, though. Home.
I pulled my two seabags out of the trunk and backseat of the Mustang and locked the car. I carried things up the steps to the big front porch. I decided to knock-I didn't think it right to just walk in when I'd been away for years. I knocked. I waited. Then I rang the doorbell, and I heard Mom coming down the stairs. She was there. I think that moms can tell if one is suffering, and can tell if one is suffering justifiably. She just looked at me for a few seconds. Ultimately she pushed the storm door open and I was in her arms. I whispered, "No charges, Mom, I'm out of the Marines. Honorable discharge." She said, "You did what was right, Jonas. I don't know what you did, I don't know if anyone was hurt, but I know you did the best that could be done. I'm so glad you are home!"
I cried. I have cried many times over al Gatar. So it goes, said Vonnegut.
*
"I have an applicant here, Mrs. Gilchromie, a veteran requesting he be admitted for teacher education and history. A guy from the Marines. He wants to get his teaching license. He needs student teaching and two...no, one methods class. He also wants to start work on a master's in history. Got out of the Marines in October. Oh, he was in Afghanistan, but there is nothing about that in the record sent to us. Resume, application, some references." Marjorie Morningbloom just pointed out the obvious to her boss.
"Is it on computer?"
"Yes, Ma'am," she responded.
Barb Gilchromie called it up. Jonas Simms, bachelor's from Miami in Oxford, First Lieutenant, nothing about the details of service in Afghanistan. Honorable discharge.
"Do we have transcripts from Miami?"
"Yes, Ma'am, pretty good. 3.23 undergrad. Strong in English. Likes history, though. Weak in foreign language; barely qualified with two years German."
The dean looked at the documents, thinking. "I have a request here from Merciful Saviour High for a more experienced student teacher to work full time and move into a position. I think they had a teacher get sick. Here it is... This could be the guy. Is he Catholic?"
"We don't ask that, Barb!!"-but then Mrs. Morningbloom said quietly, "But yes he is. It's in his military records."
"Crazy world, isn't it Marj? I still would recommend him. Call him in. I'd like to talk to him. He fits this post, if he has enough presence. I'll give Marty a call out at Saviour."
Mrs. Morningbloom dialed the number on the application. It rang a house in Sky Grey, Ohio, not far from Cincinnati.
"Hello?" A man's voice.
"Hello, I'm Marjorie Morningbloom calling for Mr. Jonas Simms?"
"Speaking, Ma'am."
"Mr. Simms, I'm trying to arrange an interview for you with Ms. Gilchromie, the dean of the school of education here at the University of Cincinnati." Morningbloom always liked to say the full name of the university; UC just seemed to abbreviate the dignity of the school.
"Yes, Ma'am," replied Simms. "When would she like to see me?"
"As soon as possible, Sir, she has openings today and tomorrow if you can make one."
"How about this afternoon?" Simms asked. He needed a half hour to shave. At least he was sober.
"Will 2:00 work for you?