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  Bahat paid at the exit from the parking lot and joined the traffic without any problems. Now she fell silent. She wasn’t stupid either. Not only was she a genius from the intellectual point of view, she also possessed enough natural sensitivity to appraise the limits of the personality of the person next to her, and she sensed that somebody here demanded the maximum and maybe more, whether it existed or not.

  She grasped that in his essence he prevented her own being from expanding to the dimensions she was used to: her maximum.

  She expelled her breath in disappointed resignation to the situation, which in any case was irreversible. The guy had come all the way from Israel, and now he was here and she had to take care of him and finish what she had started, in the spirit of the saying “Anyone embarking on a mitzvah is commanded to complete it.”

  Sometimes Jewish expressions popped into Bahat’s mind, and lately, since she had been studying to become a Reform rabbi at the Hebrew Union College, she had even felt haunted by these quotations, such as: “Who is a hero,” “A word is enough for the wise,” “Think before you act.” And in the end, after saying to herself “Let not him that girds on his armor boast himself as he that puts it off,” she turned to the man sitting next to her and asked:

  “How was the flight from New York?”

  “Ghastly by any reckoning. Bumpy all the way, like being on the cable railway to the top of Masada.”

  “And was the flight from Israel ghastly too?”

  “That was a nightmare of a different kind. Ugly flight attendants, disgusting food with your neighbor’s face stuck in your tray, and toilets that haven’t been cleaned since the invention of the airplane.”

  “I understand,” said Bahat and looked glum as a sign of sympathy. “But all that’s over and done with now, right?” She made an effort to smile at him, but she was sad. He too twisted his face into a half smile, and thought, let her go and pull the wool over somebody else’s eyes. That Israeli accent is only a disguise. She’s one hundred percent American already. You can tell by that forced smile, those translated expressions, and the automatic way she tries to make conversation. Look how nice she was to that Asiatic parking lot attendant, what was he, Japanese, Chinese, maybe Vietnamese? She told him to have a nice day, with that pseudo-familiarity that is incomprehensible to anyone who isn’t an American, and he called her Ma’am.

  Bahat calmed down and began to feel satisfied on the whole. Things were coming along. She had found him at the airport, and he was now in her hands. Despite the beauty of the place, it wasn’t every day that a scientist of such standing came to visit her in Ithaca, an Israeli what’s more, and Bahat McPhee was ready to do a lot for him. For one thing, he had won the Israel Prize—which she would never win.

  While studying to become a Reform rabbi, McPhee learned to hide her eccentricities, which had become very pronounced since her enforced loneliness. Over the years, ever since the exposure of the Emily Boston affair, her face had taken on an exaggeratedly severe expression, and she had become fanatical about noise. Even the singing of the birds at dawn disturbed her greatly.

  Now she fell enthusiastically on the important guest and told him about her advanced studies in Judaism, but he wasn’t interested. He nodded politely, but looked around at the sturdy maple trees. He immediately compared them to the coconut palm that had taken over the place where he lived. He wanted to tell McPhee about the palms of Tel Baruch North, but was unable to interrupt the torrent of her words, that were coming down on him now like an avalanche.

  “He’s really something, this masseur,” she said suddenly, “By the way, he is also the president’s masseur.”

  “Which president?”

  “The President of the United States of America. By the way, the president is a graduate of our Cornell University, and not of Yale like everybody thinks. I’m taking you to him.”

  “To the president?” asked Gruber with some surprise.

  “No,” chuckled Bahat, “to his masseur from his student days, who has continued to remain close to him. He’s first-rate. He’ll put you on your feet in a minute.”

  For a while they drove in silence until her cell phone began to signal a text message.

  “Must be one of my daughters,” she said. “They really love me. This way we keep in touch all day long, even when they’re in college. I’m very attached to them.”

  “I’m sure,” mumbled Gruber.

  She switched on the light in the car and tried to focus her eyes on the letters while driving.

  “Read me what’s written there,” she asked in the end and handed him her cell phone.

  “‘Mother, I love you,’” he said. “But in English.”

  “Ah,” sighed Bahat. “Don’t tell me, it’s the eldest. A treasure. But she wants to apply to Columbia University. I don’t understand it. Why run to New York when you’ve got the best university in the world right next door?”

  “It’s a matter of adolescence,” said Gruber, under duress, “my eldest is living in the Negev with some idiot, her boyfriend.”

  “Is that so?” Bahat was pleased. In Israel too children put a distance between themselves and their parents, you couldn’t do anything about it, it was a law of nature.

  8

  FORTY MINUTES AFTER LANDING IN ITHACA, A PLACE IN which he had never set foot before, Gruber was lying in his underpants on the bed in the aromatic treatment room of the masseur of the incumbent President of the United States of America. Before burying his face in the pillow with a round hole that made it possible to breathe without effort, he managed to read the sign in English in a color that was a little too Indian for his taste. Something in the style of Lirit’s clothes since she began going round with that creature. He read, “Leave the world, forget everything, let yourself rest,” and thought that he had better do as it said.

  “How do you want it?” asked the professional. “Strong Swedish?”

  “Strong, yes, yes,” said the Israeli. And he joked to himself: Ha ha ha. “Swedish . . .” he muttered aloud, and remembered that he was abroad and said, “Well done” in English.

  In his own country Irad never let a week pass without retaining the services of one of the better masseurs in the Tel Aviv area, with a preference for Oren Berger, who was also the Israeli triathlon champion. A few of the residents of Bat Miriam Street had seen him on television. The guy would drive up on his Harley Davidson from his inferior neighborhood, making a terrible racket as if he didn’t give a damn for Tel Baruch North, as if the whole thing meant nothing to him, as if he would never in his life live in one of the apartments there.

  No more than twenty-five years old, he was already the Israeli triathlon champion and had been for three years in succession. With his youth and his motorbike that his parents had bought him after winning the title one autumn day that may have been dreary for many others, but was not for him—he felt like a king. A masseur who looked like a wrestler. Making house calls equipped with a special mattress and ethereal oils, he would spend the whole day in Tel Baruch North.

  Gruber thought that the masseur he knew at home contained a contradiction: on the one hand, the Harley Davidson, an Israeli triathlon champion, the rough appearance with the tattoos and piercings, and on the other hand, a masseur with the most gentle touch in the Levant. All in one person: Oren Berger.

  Mandy preferred hot stones on her once-beautiful back. It was not some proven scientific preference. Simply, she was so ashamed of herself for being sexually attracted to the Israeli triathlon champion. She calculated that he was six years older than her son, and this closeness in age embarrassed her greatly.

  She really loved winners. Ever since she was twelve years old and her mother threw a bat mitzvah party for her in a hall in Dizengoff Street, close to where they lived on Arlozorov Street.

  But Mandy had eyes in her head. She had received a very conservative education, and it was in her bones. As a woman pushing fifty, she knew that instead of letting Berger feel her body she
should keep a safe distance from him, full of hot stones. Gruber talked a lot about the contradiction in the personality of the masseur, the Israeli triathlon champion, and it made her blood boil, but she didn’t say anything, and only asked herself how many more times she would have to hear about the marvelous duality in this interesting person’s personality.

  Oren Berger, the dualist, wasn’t crazy about the new neighborhood that had gone up almost overnight, but he had big ambitions to be both an internist and an acupuncturist and a doctor of Chinese medicine, and he needed a lot of patience. He had patience and motivation.

  He would begin his rounds in Telba-N. on the corner of Yocheved Bat Miriam and Alexander Penn Street, and go on from there, to all the new streets which were almost all named after poets and writers of Hebrew and Jewish literature. According to what he had found out, they were all big guns in poetry and literature and they were all dead. In the street named after Stefan Zweig, which he found on Google, he had two clients in almost every building, and it was a relatively long street.

  On Fridays he would do his weekly round there, and then, at about five, he would go home and shower. On Saturday he would go out with his girlfriend to conquer the Judean Desert on his motorcycle. He never went over sixty miles per hour, even though he could. He could do up to two hundred and twenty, but he didn’t like the resistance from the air.

  Gruber thought a lot about Oren Berger, he actually forced himself to study this Baroque character. Sometimes, when Berger was giving him a massage and loosening the knots in his muscles, Gruber thought how lucky he was to have won the Israel Prize, and that he didn’t have to run and swim and cycle for kilometers to do so (Gruber didn’t know how to ride a bicycle, and at the age of fifty it was a little late to learn, never mind all that bullshit about how it’s never too late). At the same time, he envied the young man for his amazing body.

  He compared their two statuses and thought that they were more or less on a par, except that people would never call Gruber the past winner of the Israel prize, which gave him an advantage. He would never lose the title or the prize. In this sense he felt like the Frank Sinatra of Israeli science.

  Oren Berger was never bored with Gruber. He felt close to Gruber, admired his quick thinking, and thought that to him Gruber could really talk, perhaps because they had both done something for the State of Israel. Therefore he felt it was legitimate to talk to the scientist about whatever was on his mind, and sometimes he would embark on long monologues about his exploits with his biker friends in the desert. Berger and his friends met every Saturday and rode to all the craters they felt like, as if Israel was full of craters.

  Once Gruber had even asked him to stop bragging about his amazing life as a twenty-five year old.

  A guy who on the previous Saturday had been to the ruins of a Nabatean city, and who had been there the Saturday before that too—how great was that?

  By the way, the idea of implanting artificial shoulder blades came to Amanda Gruber from Oren Berger, who in the course of the two massages he had given her before she changed to the hot stones, told her about three of his clients, two white-collar and one from King George Street in Tel Aviv, women whose posture had been transformed by the operation. The one from King George Street walked round the city center with a bare back, proud of the carved peaks of her shoulder blades. It was actually through this woman that Mandy had reached Dr. Carmi Yagoda.

  THE CURRENT MASSEUR made mincemeat of Oren Berger. With all due respect, Oren Berger might be a triathlon champion, but this guy was the champ of champs. The Yankee, who looked to be about Gruber’s age, was so outstanding that the scientist soon stopped feeling the wound gaping in his heart ever since the collapse of his T-suit experiment. At last he let go of his personal Titanic and saw things in a general, cosmic, calming light.

  “Lavender or sage?” asked the masseur.

  “Excuse me?”

  “Aroma in the room. Lavender or sage?”

  “Sage,” said Gruber to the annoyance of the masseur, who hoped he would go for lavender. Obediently he lit candles and dripped sage oil on the burner.

  The American masseur, whose nickname was Hamlet, had majored in comparative literature at Cornell and graduated with honors. His diploma hung on the wall within sight of the treatment bed.

  On the opposite wall the visitor from Tel Baruch North made out certificates for the completion of courses in massage and further studies in the field. Three of the diplomas were in Chinese or Japanese.

  A third wall was full of hand-shaped hamsa amulets. Gruber estimated their number at about fifty, and he asked Hamlet if he believed in the Evil Eye. Hamlet replied that things often happened in his life which could be attributed to the Evil Eye that someone had given him. Gruber wanted to know if there was a connection between the number of amulets and the amount of bad energy sent him by envious people, and Hamlet said yes, but that was not the reason he kept dozens of amulets on the wall. He was simply keeping them for a very high up person.

  “Who?” asked Gruber, and Hamlet ignored the impertinent prying and replied: “The president.”

  “The incumbent?” asked Gruber.

  “Yes,” said Hamlet without hesitation. “Every time he gets a hamsa from someone in your part of the world, he entrusts it to me. Who knows, maybe one day he’ll have to leave the White House and return to Texas, and then he can take these amulets as a souvenir, and what’s the harm if they incidentally also ward off evil eyes?”

  They both fell silent. Hamlet kneaded Gruber’s upper back and said: “Jesus, this isn’t a back, it’s concrete. Don’t you have masseurs in the Middle East?” he asked, completely serious.

  “Of course we do,” said Irad Gruber in an insulted tone, “I simply had crazy flights that destroyed my back, and I’m under stress. The stress is killing me,” he added, even though he was beginning to relax.

  “Okay,” said Hamlet and poured almond oil into his palms. “You’ll walk out of here soft as a ripe tomato. Do you like tomatoes?”

  “Very much,” said Gruber.

  “Which kind do you like better? The big ones or the small ones? Do you have the small ones?”

  “Yes.”

  “Small round ones or small long ones?”

  “Both kinds, I guess,” he didn’t like talking in English, and fell silent, apart from grunts of pleasurable and important pain.

  And then came the really painful moment. Suddenly, something in his back! He screamed uninhibitedly. Hamlet recoiled.

  “GOOD,” said Hamlet regretfully. “They say that over here the taste is less natural, but I don’t know the natural taste, so what do I care.”

  “What are you talking about?” asked Gruber, his whole back still hurting.

  “The small round tomatoes.”

  Gruber couldn’t stand the peace of mind that masseurs tried to convey. It annoyed him to be spoken to as if he was in a monastery.

  “One of the times the president was here he brought me a divine basket of fruit.”

  He went back to work, concentrating on another area of the back, massaging and oiling, massaging and oiling, he too grunting.

  “The president’s got a lot on his mind now and I respect him. He has the elections to worry about. Otherwise he would get to Cornell more often. He really likes visiting his friends. A great guy. He’ll win the elections.

  “And now relax as if you’re in a crater on Venus,” he said slowly, in a low voice.

  “What?”

  “I took a little survey among my clients. What most relaxes them is a crater on Venus, or some other deserted planet, where the force of gravity is greater than on Earth. And to imagine that nobody can see them. In this way they’re forced to blot me out too, and causality, and judgmental attitudes, and I can tell you it relaxes most of them. Even though I’m married to a wonderful woman, before I go to sleep even I imagine that I’m alone on a deserted planet, and that I have no history. History is a load. A burden. Comparative literature is
a burden too. A lot of things to remember. And so I decided to devote my life to my peace of mind.”

  “Ah, ah,” Gruber groaned enjoyably as the latter smeared more oil on his back.

  The masseur smiled to himself, sweating and satisfied, and said, “In half an hour tell me if you’re ready to sign the wall behind you, which you can’t see,” and he turned his head to indicate it. “A wall of important, satisfied clients. Abba Eban signed it too. I liked the late Abba Eban a lot.”

  “If Abba Eban signed, I’ll sign too,” said Gruber without betraying his surprise. Even though he hadn’t yet decided who it would flatter more, him or the former foreign minister.

  “The former president of France, Georges Pompidou, signed too. Remember him?”

  “How old are you?” Gruber suddenly asked. He himself hardly remembered the late Pompidou, and when he tried to imagine his face he wasn’t sure that he wasn’t confusing him with some other European leader. An Englishman maybe, or the secretary general of the United Nations.

  “Fifty-nine,” said the masseur.

  “You should come and give massages in Israel,” said Gruber.

  For ten seconds, the masseur dragged out his chuckle at Gruber’s joke—leave Ithaca to go and massage Israelis’ backs!

  “That’s how it is with you people in the Middle East,” he spoke again, after an interval, while massaging Gruber’s scalp. “You kill them, they kill you. You have no choice, you have to kill one another,” and he permitted himself to press down lightly on a few meridians.

  “That’s all,” he said in his gentle voice, and went to the end of the room to wash his hands in the sink. Gruber noticed that he exaggerated his ablutions. While soaping and scrubbing his arms up to the elbows, Hamlet called out to him, “Get up very slowly without straining your neck. You have a problem with the first vertebra, which holds up the head. When you get back home, go and have an x-ray. I didn’t work on it much, only around it, on the muscles.”

  He dried his arms on a towel that matched the other colors in the room: pale peach and magnolia.