SEVERAL YEARS AGO. TOWARD the end of the last millennium, two young undergraduates fell in love and decided to marryâmarry eventually, but not immediately. Larry Morton and Dolores Torre were second semester freshmen at the time, with years of education before them. They had come to Notre Dame with the intention, firm in his case, vague in hers, of going on to law school after graduation, ideally at Notre Dame, thus becoming, in the phrase, double domers.
They met in a philosophy class in the Program of Liberal Studies but had been mere acquaintances for weeks until a clash over the meaning of the death of Socrates brought them together. Dolores insisted that Socrates had committed suicide; Larry maintained that he had been unjustly executed by the state.
“He drank the hemlock himself.”
“He had no choice.”
“No one forced him to drink it.”
“That was the sentence.”
“But he executed it himself. I say that someone who executes his own death sentence is a suicide.”
The argument continued after class, across the campus, to Reckers and after that to Howard Hall where Dolores lived. Larry roomed in Dillon, just across the mall. They sat in the lounge of Howard and each decided to postpone the debate until the other overcame the dementia he or she momentarily was in the grips of.
He was from Minneapolis; she was from Phoenix. How did she
like Notre Dame? How did he? He wouldn't have gone anywhere else.
“I was so afraid I wouldn't be admitted.”
Larry who had some experience of her mind expressed surprise.
She pretended to ignore this. “I thought they had a quota on girls, Larry.”
“They do. One girl to every boy.”
“No one told me who mine is.”
“That's why I'm here. This is an official visit.”
In jokes begins responsibility. They became inseparable. They fell in love. They decided to marry. To seal the bargain, since a formal engagement seemed premature, they spoke to the rector of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart on campus.
“We want to reserve a day for our wedding.”
Father Rocca widened his eyes. “What year are you in?”
“Freshman.”
His manner became avuncular. “Have you talked to Campus Ministry about marriage preparation classes?”
“We are thinking of June 2002.”
The priest laughed. “But that's years from now.”
“We want to make sure we'll be married here.”
“Our schedule is crowded but ⦔ He paused and his manner became as serious as theirs. “Well, okay. But I don't have a calendar for that far ahead.”
“Saturday, June 17. We looked it up.”
“Where did you find a 2002 calendar?”
“On the web.”
He let it go. “I suppose if people register their babies with the Admissions Office as soon as they're born, this isn't really too odd.”
The weddings of alumni in the campus church, and in the Log
Chapel were a regular feature of the spring and summer at Notre Dame. Larry's parents had been married in Sacred Heart.
“But your mother couldn't have gone here,” the priest said.
“Saint Mary's. It was the same thing then.”
“That was my fallback choice,” Dolores said.
Father Rocca provided them with an official recognition of their reservation for June 17, 2002, a note written on Basilica stationery, since he did not have a date book for that distant year.
“God knows if I'll still be rector here when the time comes, but this will seal it.”
They made a photocopy of the letter and argued over who should have the original.
“Take it, Dolores. You're less likely to lose it.”
“Lose it!”
“You know what I mean.”
“I can't tell the copy from the original anyway.”
They continued to be inseparable into their sophomore year but then began to draw apart. Near Easter, by mutual consent and somewhat sadly, they broke up. They continued to see one another on occasion. Two years later, at graduation, they hugged and said good-bye and for a moment it seemed that things might start up again. But the moment passed.
“I'm going to work for West Publishing in Saint Paul,” Dolores said.
“I enter law school in the fall.”
“Here?”
“Where else?”
THERE WAS A BUMPER STICKER Roger Knight saw around the campus on game days when fans flowed in from across the land. GOD MADE NOTRE DAME #1. The claim was theologically impeccable so long as one had in mind the Lady after whom the university was named and not the university itself, still less one of the varsity teams. A statue of the eponymous Notre Dame graced the golden dome, a huge effigy visible for miles around, the emblem of the university named for her: Notre Dame du Lac, to be exact, Our Lady of the Lake. Or rather to be inexact, since there were two campus lakes, Saint Joseph's and Saint Mary's. But if the great golden dome and the statue of the Virgin atop it were visible from the ground, they were even more so from the air. Flights coming into South Bend followed a landing pattern that brought them in low over the campus, and pilots liked to give their passengers an extended view.
“There she is, folks, Notre Dame.”
Thus spoke the pilot of the commuter plane Roger and his brother, Phil, were flying in on from Chicago, propeller driven, cramped, a notch or two above a hang glider. Roger was wedged into two seats, the armrest between them raised, with Phil across the aisle. The little plane had headed immediately out over Lake Michigan when it took off from O'Hare and had stayed over the great lake until a few minutes before entering the pattern that took it over the campus.
“That's the stadium!” cried the pilot, and those with window
seats dutifully pressed their noses against the glass and looked. “And that's the golden dome. See that statue on top of it? That's Knute Rockne, the famous football coach.”
Roger looked at Phil. “He can't be serious, Roger.”
But apparently he was serious. Perhaps he thought the statue was of Rockne in academic garb.
The pilot would not be the first one to mistake the athletic excellence of the university for its central purpose. This year God had indeed made Notre Dame #1 in both senses. Its academic ranking had risen into the top ten, a fact featured on the home page of the university web site, to the chagrin of senior faculty computer literate enough to have noticed it.
“What in hell is
U.S. News & World Report?
”
“A lesser
TIME.
”
“What is time?”
“The measure of motion,” broke in a philosopher, and cackled.
Apart from the questionable legitimacy of such academic ranking, the varsity teams had excelled in every sport. The football team, after half a dozen years of drought, had ended its season playing for the national championship. Alas, they lost, but loyal fans attributed this to the outrageous officiating. Whatever wounds the loss inflicted were soon healed by the performance of the basketball teams, women's and men's, both of which were said to be headed for the Final Four. Even hockey, that poor brother of the Joyce Athletic Center, had swept its divisional play-offs, but this success melted away before the ascendancy of the basketball teams.
The two aspects of the university were loved unequally by the Knight brothers. When Roger had been offered the Huneker Chair of Catholic Studies, he had been flattered and delighted. He had not taught after receiving his doctorate from Princeton as a precocious nineteen year old. His enormous weight and eccentric manner had
stood in the way of an academic career, and after a stint in the navy, where he ballooned to a size that earned him an early discharge, he lived with Phil and eventually became, like him, a private detective. They had been working out of Rye, New York, whither they had moved after Phil had been mugged in Manhattan for the third time. That one whose investigative services were his bread and butter should himself be unsafe on the streets of the metropolis did not seem a good marketing line. From Rye, Phil began to run an ad in the phone directories of various major cities, giving only an 800 number and accepting only those clients who offered a particular challenge and one that did not pose too great a difficulty for Roger's participation. Their's had been a pleasant life, active and lucrative enough for their purposes, and allowing Roger to pursue his myriad intellectual interests and carry on an enormous E-mail correspondence with kindred souls around the globe. The offer from Notre Dame, a welcome and unlooked for surprise, had meant the end of their life in Rye.
“Of course you'll take it,” Philip had cried.
“But the agency?”
“I can work from anywhere, Roger. Clients don't know we live in Rye unless we tell them. South Bend might be even more convenient.”
Roger was not deceived. Phil lifted the notion of sports fan to hitherto unknown heights, and he had long followed the fortunes of Notre Dame with a close and biased eye. Moving to South Bend ranked for Phil just below the beatific vision. His enthusiasm removed Roger's hesitation. Roger himself had looked forward to the library and the stimulation of his new colleagues, to say nothing of the prospect of teaching.
And so they had come to Notre Dame. The few years of their residence had rooted them in the university to such a degree that it took an effort of memory to think of a time before this.
Their flight from Chicago touched down, and the passengers straggled into the terminal. Roger took up his vigil by the baggage carousel, while Phil went to fetch the van from long-term parking. The vehicle had been remodeled so as to accommodate Roger's bulk. A rotating chair in the middle of the van, behind Phil in the driver's seat, enabled Roger to maneuver like a swivel gunner in World War II. A laptop was anchored to a table and thus out of use when he turned to the back, but he could easily swing east and west and then forward to chat with Phil. But on the ride from the airport this day, both brothers were quiet.
“I want a nap,” Phil murmured.
“You deserve it.”
Joseph Primero, a prospective client in Minneapolis, whose collection of rare books was destined for Notre Dame, had wanted to interview Philip, and vice versa, and Roger had gone along in order to see Primero's collection. For the nonce, he too could use some rest. But when they pulled up in front of their apartment, located in one of the buildings making up the graduate student village, a horn sounded and Nancy Beatty hopped out of her car and hurried toward them.
“Where have you two been! I was so worried about you.”
Phil looked at Roger. “We've been away.”
“That explains why your phone wasn't answered. It just rang and rang with no beep to leave a message. Larry wouldn't let me call Campus Security.”
It was a pleasant thought that their absence had caused such concern. It was still a novelty for the Knight brothers to have people who worried about them.
“Where's Larry?”
Her eyes rolled upward. “Studying.”
“Would you like to come in?”
She thought about it, then shook her head. “No. You're tired. But after this, let someone know when you're going away. Where have you been?”
“Minneapolis.”
“Can I help with those?”
Phil had begun to unload their bags from the van. The thought of this frail girl helping him with the luggage brought a frown.
“It was just a thought.” She paused. “I do have something to tell you.”
“Come on in.”
Again she shook her head. “Not now. I want Larry with me when I tell you.”
“Can I guess?”
“Don't you dare.”