Authors: Kurt Vonnegut
All this came out in divorce proceedings brought against O’Looney by his wife of thirty-two years. It was front-page stuff in the tabloids for a week or more. O’Looney was already famous by then. The papers called him “The man who blew the whistle on RAMJAC,” or variations on that theme. Now his wife was claiming that his affections had been alienated by a ghost. He wouldn’t sleep with her anymore. He stopped brushing his teeth. He was chronically late to work. He became a grandfather, and he didn’t care. He wouldn’t even look at the baby.
What was particularly sick about his behavior was that, even after he found out what Mary Kathleen had really been like, he stayed in love with the original dream.
“Nobody can ever take that away from me,” he said. “It’s the most precious thing I own.”
He has been relieved of his duties, I hear. His wife is suing him again—this time for her share in the small fortune he got for the movie rights to his dream. The film is to be shot in a spooky old mansion in Morristown. If you can believe the gossip columns, there is to be a talent search for an actress to play the Irish immigrant girl. Al Pacino has already agreed to play Sheriff O’Looney, and Kevin McCarthy to play the eccentric millionaire.
• • •
So I dallied too long, and now I must go to prison again, they say. My high jinks with Mary Kathleen’s remains were not crimes in and of themselves, since corpses have no more rights than do orts from last night’s midnight snack. My actions were accessory, however, to the commission of a class E felony, which according to Section 190.30 of the Penal Law of New York State consists of unlawfully concealing a will.
I had entombed the will itself in a safe-deposit box of Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company, a division of RAMJAC.
I have tried to explain to my little dog that her master must go away for a while—because he violated Section 190.30. I have told her that laws are written to be obeyed. She understands nothing. She loves my voice. All news from me is good news. She wags her tail.
• • •
I lived very high. I bought a duplex with a low-interest company loan. I cashed stock options for clothes and furniture. I became a fixture at the Metropolitan Opera and the New York City Ballet, coming and going by limousine.
I gave intimate parties at my home for RAMJAC authors and recording artists and movie actors and circus performers—Isaac Bashevis Singer, Mick Jagger, Jane Fonda, Günther Gebel Williams, and the like. It was fun. After RAMJAC acquired the Marlborough Gallery and Associated American Artists, I had painters and sculptors to my parties, too.
How well did I do at RAMJAC? During my incumbency, my division, including subsidiaries under its control, both covert and overt, won eleven platinum records, forty-two gold records, twenty-two Oscars, eleven National Book Awards, two American League pennants, two National League pennants, two World Series, and fifty-three Grammies—and we never failed to show a return on capital of less than 23 percent. I even engaged in corporate in-fighting, preventing the transfer of the catfood company from my division to General Foods. It was exciting. I got really mad.
We just missed getting another Nobel prize in literature several times. But then we already had two: Saul Bellow and Mr. Singer.
I myself have made
Who’s Who
for the first time in my life. This is a slightly tarnished triumph, admittedly, since my own division controls Gulf & Western, which controls
Who’s Who
. I put it all in there, except for the prison term and the name of my son: where I was born, where I went to college, various jobs I’ve held, my wife’s maiden name.
• • •
Did I invite my own son to my parties—to chat with so many heroes and heroines of his? No. Did he quit the
Times
when I became his superior there? No. Did he write or telephone greetings of any sort? No. Did I try to get in touch with him? Only once. I was in the basement apartment of Leland and Sarah Clewes. I had been drinking, something I don’t enjoy and rarely do. And I was physically
so close to my son. His apartment was only thirty feet above my head.
It was Sarah who had made me telephone him.
So I dialed my son’s number. It was about eight o’clock at night. One of my little grandchildren answered, and I asked him his name.
“Juan,” he said.
“And your last name?” I said.
“Stankiewicz,” he said. In accordance with my wife’s will, incidentally, Juan and his brother, Geraldo, were receiving reparations from West Germany for the confiscation of my wife’s father’s bookstore in Vienna by the Nazis after the
Anschluss
, Germany’s annexation of Austria in Nineteen-hundred and Thirty-eight. My wife’s will was an old one, written when Walter was a little boy. The lawyer had advised her to leave the money to her grandchildren so as to avoid one generation of taxes. She was trying to be smart about money. I was out of work at the time.
“Is your daddy home?” I said.
“He’s at the movies,” he said.
I was so relieved. I did not leave my name. I said I would call back later.
• • •
As for what Arpad Leen suspected about me: Like anyone else, he was free to suspect as much or as little as he pleased. There were no more fingerprinted messages from Mrs. Graham. The last one confirmed in writing that
Clewes and I and Ubriaco and Edel and Lawes and Carter and Fender were to be made vice-presidents.
There was a deathly silence after that—but there had been deathly silences before. One lasted two years. Leen meanwhile operated under the mandate of a letter Mary Kathleen had sent him in Nineteen-hundred and Seventy-one, which said only this: “acquire, acquire, acquire.”
She had certainly picked the right man for the job. Arpad Leen was born to acquire and acquire and acquire.
What was the biggest lie I told him? That I saw Mrs. Graham once a week, and that she was happy and well and quite satisfied with the way things were going.
As I testified before a grand jury: He gave every evidence of believing me, no matter what I said about Mrs. Graham.
I was in an extraordinary position theologically with respect to that man. I knew the answers to so many of the ultimate questions he might want to ask about that life of his.
Why did he have to go on acquiring and acquiring and acquiring? Because his deity wanted to give the wealth of the United States to the people of the United States. Where was his deity? In Morristown, New Jersey. Was she pleased with how he was doing his job? She was neither pleased nor displeased, since she was as dead as a doornail. What should he do next? Find another deity to serve.
I was in an extraordinary position theologically with respect to his millions of employees, too, of course, since he
was a deity to them, and supposedly knew exactly what he wanted and why.
• • •
Well—it is all being sold off now by the federal government, which has hired twenty thousand new bureaucrats, half of them lawyers, to oversee the job. Many people assumed that RAMJAC owned everything in the country. It was something of an anticlimax, then, to discover that it owned only 19 percent of it—not even one-fifth. Still—RAMJAC was enormous when compared with other conglomerates. The second largest conglomerate in the Free World was only half its size. The next five after that, if combined, would have been only about two-thirds the size of RAMJAC.
There are plenty of dollars, it turns out, to buy all the goodies the federal government has to sell. The President of the United States himself was astonished by how many dollars had been scattered over the world through the years. It was as though he had told everybody on the planet, “Please rake your yard and send the leaves to me.”
There was a photograph on an inside page of the
Daily News
yesterday of a dock in Brooklyn. There was about an acre of bales that looked like cotton on the dock. These were actually bales of American currency from Saudi Arabia, cash on the barrelhead, so to speak, for the McDonald’s Hamburgers Division of RAMJAC.
The headline said this: “HOME AT LAST!”
Who is the lucky owner of all those bales? The people
of the United States, according to the will of Mary Kathleen O’Looney.
• • •
What, in my opinion, was wrong with Mary Kathleen’s scheme for a peaceful economic revolution? For one thing, the federal government was wholly unprepared to operate all the business of RAMJAC on behalf of the people. For another thing: Most of those businesses, rigged only to make profits, were as indifferent to the needs of the people as, say, thunderstorms. Mary Kathleen might as well have left one-fifth of the weather to the people. The businesses of RAMJAC, by their very nature, were as unaffected by the joys and tragedies of human beings as the rain that fell on the night that Madeiros and Sacco and Vanzetti died in an electric chair. It would have rained anyway.
The economy is a thoughtless weather system—and nothing more.
Some joke on the people, to give them such a thing.
• • •
There was a supper party given in my honor last week—a “going away party,” you might say. It celebrated the completion of my last full day at the office. The host and hostess were Leland Clewes and his lovely wife Sarah. They have not moved out of their basement apartment in Tudor City, nor has Sarah given up private nursing, although Leland is now pulling down about one hundred thousand dollars a year at RAMJAC. Much of their money goes to the
Foster Parents Program, a scheme that allows them to support individual children in unfortunate circumstances in many parts of the world. They are supporting fifty children, I think they said. They have letters and photographs from several of them, which they passed around.
I am something of a hero to certain people, which is a novelty. I single-handedly extended the life of RAMJAC by two years and a little more. If I had not concealed the will of Mary Kathleen, those at the party would never have become vice-presidents of RAMJAC. I myself would have been thrown out on my ear—to become what I expect to be anyway, if I survive my new prison term, which is a shopping-bag man.
Am I broke again? Yes. My defense has been expensive. Also: My Watergate lawyers have caught up with me. I still owe them a lot for all they did for me.
Clyde Carter, my former guard in Georgia and now a vice-president of the Chrysler Air Temp Division of RAMJAC, was there with his lovely wife, Claudia. He did a side-splitting imitation of his cousin the President, saying, “I will never lie to you,” and promising to rebuild the South Bronx and so on.
Frank Ubriaco was there with his lovely new wife, Marilyn, who is only seventeen. Frank is fifty-three. They met at a discotheque. They seem very happy. She said that what attracted her to him at first was that he wore a white glove on only one hand. She had to find out why. He told her at first that the hand had been burned by a Chinese communist flame thrower during the Korean War, but later
admitted that he had done it to himself with a Fry-o-lator. They have started a collection of tropical fish. They have a coffee table that contains tropical fish.
Frank invented a new sort of cash register for the McDonald’s Hamburgers Division. It was getting harder all the time to find employees who understood numbers well, so Frank took the numbers off the keys of the cash register and substituted pictures of hamburgers and milkshakes and French fries and Coca-Colas and so on. The person toting up a bill would simply punch the pictures of the various things a customer had ordered, and the cash register would add it up for him.
Frank got a big bonus for that.
My guess is that the Saudis will keep him on.
There was a telegram to me from Dr. Robert Fender, still in prison in Georgia. Mary Kathleen had wanted RAMJAC to make him a vice-president, too, but there was no way to get him out of prison. Treason was just too serious a crime. Clyde Carter had written to him that I was going back to prison myself, and that there was going to be a party for me, and that he should send a telegram.
This was all it said: “Ting-a-ling.”
That was from his science-fiction story about the judge from the planet Vicuna, of course, who had to find a new body to occupy, and who flew into my ear down there in Georgia, and found himself stuck to my feelings and destiny until I died.
According to the judge in the story, that was how they said both hello and good-bye on Vicuna: “Ting-a-ling.”
“Ting-a-ling” was like the Hawaiian “aloha,” which also means both hello and good-bye.
“Hello and good-bye.” What else is there to say? Our language is much larger than it needs to be.
I asked Clyde if he knew what Fender was working on now.
“A science-fiction novel about economics,” said Clyde.
“Did he say what pseudonym he’s going to use?” I said.
“‘Kilgore Trout,’” said Clyde.
• • •
My devoted secretary, Leora Borders, and her husband, Lance, were there. Lance was just getting over a radical mastectomy. He told me that one mastectomy in two hundred was performed on a man. Live and learn!
There were several other RAMJAC friends who should have been there, but dared not come. They feared that their reputations, and hence their futures as executives, might be tainted if it were known that they were friendly with me.
There were telegrams from other people I had had to my famous little parties—John Kenneth Galbraith and Salvador Dali and Erica Jong and Liv Ullmann and the Flying Farfans and on and on.
Robert Redford’s telegram, I remember, said this: “Hang tough.”
The telegrams were something less than spontaneous.
As Sarah Clewes would admit under questioning, she had been soliciting them all week long.
Arpad Leen sent a spoken message through Sarah, which was meant for my ears alone: “Good show.” That could be taken a million different ways.
He was no longer presiding over the dismemberment of RAMJAC, incidentally. He had been hired away by American Telephone and Telegraph Company, which had just been bought by a new company in Monaco named BIBEC. Nobody has been able to find out who or what BIBEC is, so far. Some people think it’s the Russians.