He was something of an enigma, when we were younger. When we first met.
Maybe because he wasn't the typical kid next door. Maybe, too, because as soon as you met Dalton Rand you knew there was something about him worth knowing, something almost bigger than life.
I say that because there seemed to me to be an inextricable connection between the Dalton Rand I knew --and by that I mean the year I spent in school with him -- and the spirit of those times. He was alive in ways I never knew existed, preternaturally attuned to people, and people's connection to him. I often think of charged particles adrift in the cosmos, repelling, attracting, colliding, and when two extremely dissimilar particles collide there exists, if only for the brief span of it's existence -- something like a momentary lapse of reason. The laws of the universe break down, and out of the collision something peculiar emerges. A union so singular, so insular in it's inception that it's impossible not to get pulled into it's orbit. Curiosity works that way too, I guess.
It's difficult for me to think about those days, quite painful in fact. I think it's difficult to reconcile the man I think he became with the way he was then. I say this because even before he met my sister Madeleine, he seemed destined to play an outsized role in both our lives. But I have to pause here, pause to see him as he was then in my mind's eye, because with the passage of so much time I don't see those days as clearly as I once did. For me, somewhere in time he slipped into the darker realms of mythos. He belongs to the sixties, you see, and in one shattering moment he became an essential part of our mythology. He belonged to us because, in the brief spark of his youth, he came to embody everything that was righteous and strong and pure in us, and how that just wasn't enough.
So, where was I? Oh yes, bigger than life. I have to think he knew he was too, even then. He thought he knew where he was going in life, and understood some people would try to tag along for part of the ride. Anyway, I think this one fact of life, more than any other I'm going to try to pass on, defined the course of events that year. Without this one simple fact to ground you, that Rand was even then a true force of nature who pulled you into his orbit, everything else about this story will seem faintly ridiculous, even a cumbersome delusion of sorts. You'll have missed the point, I guess you might say, and that would be too bad.
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I met Rand in August, 1969, just before my freshman year of high school began, and our experiences growing up couldn't have been more different. I think kids just growing up in the late 60s were already growing allergic to Strawberry Fields, Lucy in the Sky with all those Diamonds, and all the other psychedelia that was in full bloom by the mid-sixties. We were too young to have been terminally shaped by the so-called counter-culture, and so lacked the full-blown rebelliousness of our older brothers and sisters. Like so many of us, Rand was not yet full of the rebelliousness that would soon define those precious, terrible moment of our lives. But even in the eyes of a bell-bottomed, round-eye romantic like myself, the first time I saw him I could tell there was something outrageous, possibly even titanic about the guy. I think he was, in a phrase that has passed in and out of vogue over the past two hundred years, a World Historical Figure just waiting for his moment.
When I first laid eyes on him, Dalton Rand was the square-jawed fighter pilot-to-be who all but proclaimed the Age of Aquarius was going to come crashing down all over our fevered little heads. Perhaps the central irony of this story is that we, Rand and I, had just been deposited onto the well-manicured grounds of a distinguished military academy in north-central Indiana. Vast manicured lawns rolled between ordered rows of cedars to a small lake, the grounds presided over by a huge granite cathedral, the whole place surrounded by football fields and parade grounds. The campus was a grand and glorious prison, and by the late sixties the whole place was drowning in it's contradictions.
That first day? Well, that day was as hard and real as life had ever been for the two of us, and quite possibly because the school was dedicated to creating young men ready for military service. But time has a way of creating subtle ironies in our lives, and it's those little incongruities that keep our lives interesting, I think. For instance, Rand's hair was long and blond; mine short and red. He looked carved from purest white marble, rather like Michelangelo's David; perhaps I could most charitably be described as a very pale string bean, with hideously long legs. He seemed to regard his sudden appearance at the school as an anomaly of cosmic significance, yet while I was a little confused about what life here might hold, I was sure whatever happened would be less traumatic than life at home.
We both arrived on the same chartered bus from O'Hare; that old stainless steel bullet dropped us off on a sweltering Saturday morning in mid-August, 1969; Rand's black-stenciled olive drab foot-locker matched mine in all details save a few scratches and dents, while his jeans and white polo shirt were somewhat at odds with this universe. There were 43 of us on that bus, and I think, looking back on it all, we must have all looked rather alike -- except for Rand. If you are the cynical type, you might have said our group looked rather patrician. Gray flannel slacks, white button down Oxfords, red and blue regimental ties...you know the score, I'm sure. We probably looked like clueless stacks of Wonder-Bread.
As it happened, Rand and myself were assigned to room 21, a second floor corner room that looked down on a little stone and hedge-lined quad. Statues and cannon defined the view out our windows, images of history and sacrifice. My first impression of the view was that it was pretty nice -- for a prison. Even one of the cannon was aimed squarely at our windows, and the placement seemed to reinforce the sense of involuntary confinement I felt. I fondly remembered looking at the school's glossy catalogue the winter before, at the ordered rows of scowling cadets and a fierce looking fullback charging behind pulling guards, and wanting passionately, furiously, to belong to this place. As is so often the case, you've got to be careful what you wish for. Clio is a deadly muse, is she not?
I turned from my prison window and opened my footlocker, looked down at the proscribed number of white boxer shorts labeled just so, at the white sheets my grandmother had laundered and folded not a day before, and I felt the first stabs of anomie. Then I looked at Rand. He was lying on his bed face up, staring intently at the ceiling. He didn't look lost there, far from it. No, it looked as if he was pondering the very limits of the universe, the nature of existence.
And I noticed them then. The shoes on his feet.
Wingtips.
Heavy, black wingtips on his feet, just like my father's. And probably, I thought, just like his father's. A polo shirt, jeans, and big, fat wingtips?