Adam Levin - The Instructions

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Beginning with a chance encounter with the beautiful Eliza June Watermark and ending, four days and 900 pages later, with the Events of November 17, this is the story of Gurion Maccabee, age ten: a lover, a fighter, a scholar, and a truly spectacular talker. Expelled from three Jewish day-schools for acts of violence and messianic tendencies, Gurion ends up in the Cage, a special lockdown program for the most hopeless cases of Aptakisic Junior High. Separated from his scholarly followers, Gurion becomes a leader of a very different sort, with righteous aims building to a revolution of troubling intensity.
The Instructions

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That’s Eliyahu of Brooklyn, I said, and there are no more Jews, only Israelites. So don’t get toney just cause someone who dresses sharper than you knows more—

“It’s not cause he’s Orthodox.” “Nathan Feingold’s Orthodox.” “And he’s a really good buddy.” “It’s just we didn’t know him, right guys?” “Right.” “Yeah.” “He’s new.” “We didn’t know him.”

I know him, I said. And he’s your brother, and if you saw him get his hat knocked off and didn’t do anything about it, you should be ashamed and repentent. Not toney.

“We didn’t see him get his hat knocked off.” “We just heard about it.” “And if you say he’s our brother, then he’s our brother.” “And if you know him, then maybe he has a pennygun.” “We can’t say for sure.” “We can’t say for sure, but we’re not being toney about him, Gurion. Really.”

And it was true. At least it seemed to have become true: the tone was gone.

Do you have them on you? I said. Your weapons?

“We keep them at home,” The Levinson said. “We’re waiting.”

For what? I said.

“More instructions.”

There aren’t any more, I said.

“You’re instructing us to stop waiting?”

Sure, I said.

Then Shpritzy came out of the Quiet Room. He had a fat lip and a temple-bruise. His shirt was torn on the sleeve-seam. Besides that, he looked just like the rest of them.

“So who messed you up?” said Nakamook.

“Don’t say!” said the four. Shpritzy didn’t say.

I’m Gurion, I said to him.

“Finally,” he said.

He sat down in the middle of his friends. They were, the five of them: Shpritzy, The Levinson, Mr. Goldblum, GlassMan, and Pinker. They leaned into each other, back-slapping.

Nakamook said to me, “Why’s it okay for them to betray your Instructions ?”

I said, They didn’t.

“How’s that?” he said.

Their document’s different.

“Different,” said Nakamook.

From yours, I said.

“Why different?” he said.

They’re, I said, Israelites.

“Okay,” he said. “So what, though?” he said.

You’re not, I said.

“But so what , though?” he said.

So I didn’t want you spreading my instructions.

“Spreading them to who?”

Others.

“Other goys.”

Goyim.

“Goyim, whatever. Other goyim like who? Like Vincie? Main Man? Goyim like Leevon?”

Hey—

“Or no, you mean goyim like Botha and Slokum, right? Like Floyd and Desormie? Acer and Berman? Pinge and Brodsky? — no, not Brodsky; not a goy, Brodsky. Not Berman, either.”

Listen—

“Right — I know. It’s okay. I know. I’m making it too complicated. Just goyim, right? All of the goyim. Any of the goyim. Vincie and Slokum, Main Man and Botha, Leevon and Floyd and Sandy. Same difference.”

Benji.

“What?”

I—

“Why would I spread your instructions, anyway?” he said.

I didn’t say you would — it’s just theirs say to spread them.

“These five little Cubs-fan knuckleheads here.”

Yes, I said, but—

“These little guys you don’t know — theirs say to spread them.”

Yes, I said.

“And mine not only doesn’t say spread them. Mine says burn this document or we’re enemies,” said Benji.

I know what yours says. I wrote it, I said. I wrote both of them, I said.

“Mine says if I don’t burn it we’re enemies,” he said. “Theirs say, ‘Strangers, please spread this to other strangers.’”

Other Israelites, I said.

“Other Israelite strangers.”

Yes, already. So what? I said. I said, Why don’t you just take it as a compliment, Benji?

“A compliment?” he said.

A compliment, I said. I said, You’re the only non-Israelite I ever gave it to.

“You didn’t, though,” he said. “You didn’t give it to me.”

I—

“You changed it,” he said.

But—

“You didn’t?”

I did. That’s established. We’ve long since established that. I did it for you though. Because you’re you.

“Nakamook the goy. Gentile me.”

Nakamook the friend. My best friend Benji.

“A mensch among the goyim, but a goy nonetheless.”

The only non-Israelite to whom I’d give Ulpan .

Ulpan ?”

That’s what it’s called. I changed the title of yours.

“Whose is better?” he said.

That’s, I said. That’s a weird question. I don’t think it makes… It depends on who—

“To you ,” he said. “To Gurion. Whose is better? The one you gave strangers to spread to strangers, or the one you gave the goy containing the threat?”

In answer, I shrugged = I don’t want to lie to you.

“He shrugs. He’s speechless. He stammers and shrugs.”

Back off now, I said.

“‘Back off now,’ he says.”

What do you want from me? I said.

“What do you think I fucken want, man.”

You’re not an Israelite. I can’t do anything about that, Benji.

“Jesus fucking Christ.”

You want contrition? You want me to apologize ? Cause you’re not an Israelite? Because I am ?

A tube above us flickered and made him look dead.

Benji said, “Tch.” He said, “Nevermind.” He pulled the pencil-stub out of his hand with his teeth. “Flesh wound,” he said, and forced a laugh. He folded it up in a “Say No” brochure from the D.A.R.E. shelf by the door, said, “Relic in an envelope.” Another forced laugh and he left into Main Hall.

I had done, from the beginning, the best I could. Why couldn’t he see that? Why can’t he see that? Why can’t he see my side of things? I thought. But he did, I knew — he did see my side. And so I attempted to see his side and saw it, and saw that I’d seen it — I’d always seen it; I hadn’t missed anything — I just wasn’t on it. Benji’d get over it. He’d have to get over it. It wasn’t a thing I had to get over.

I pressed all my fingers against all my fingers while cracking sounds echoed all across Main Hall; Benji was flying at ceiling-hung EXIT plaques, overhead-punching them off their cheap mounts.

My fingers wouldn’t break.

The cracking sounds stopped.

For three or four seconds, Main Hall was quiet.

Then Benji set off the fire alarm.

The sky was always prettiest when I hadnt known Id see it It seemed less - фото 84

The sky was always prettiest when I hadn’t known I’d see it. It seemed less round, more like a blanket. The clouds all looked sewn in and deliberate.

As soon as we got outside, I felt watched.

For mid-November, it wasn’t cold. The air didn’t make steam of our breath or crust our gooze, but still I was coatless and I shivered a little.

Nurse Clyde, who was holding the puker in a fireman’s carry, led me and the Five across Rand Road to the two-hill field and told us to find our fifth-period teachers and let them know we were safe. Then the nurse set the girl in the grass and she puked more.

Most students and teachers were still exiting the school. The Five followed me past the ones who’d already exited — none of whom were June — and I took us up the high hill for a better view. I started a circle by leaning on a stump. The Five finished the circle and we sat facing west.

A paramedic and a cop were consulting with each other outside the front entrance, from which students and teachers continually emerged to cross the street in single-file lines. Each teacher, once her class arrived in the field, ordered her students to stay where they were, then headed to an area just east of the sidewalk where a growing group of teachers huddled and gossiped. No one else climbed the high hill, but many of the students, once their teachers had gone, abandoned their classes to find their friends, and they all faced the school, some hugging themselves and some rubbing others’ shoulders and others playing slapslap for warmth. As their numbers grew and their density thickened, more and more of them stood, and more cop cars and fire engines came up Rand Road.

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