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"Goddamn it, I want to be that drinking fountain," a boy with the Hebrew name Peretz-Yizchak said.
"I want to be the missing part of those crotchless undies."
"I want to fill my dick with mercury."
A pause.
"What the hell does that mean?"
"You know," Marty Cohen-Rosenbaum, né Chaim ben Kalman, said, "like
make my dick a thermometer."
"By feeding it sushi?"
"Or just injecting it. Or whatever. Dude, you know what I mean."
Four shakes, and their heads achieved an unintended synchronicity, like Ping-Pong spectators.
In a whisper: "To put it in her butt."
The others were lucky to have twenty-first-century moms who knew that temperatures were taken digitally in the ear. And Chaim was lucky that the boys' attention was diverted before they had time to slap him with a nickname he would never shed.
Sam was sitting on the bench outside Rabbi Singer's office, head lowered, eyes on the upturned hands in his lap like a monk waiting to burn. The boys stopped, turning their self-hatred toward him.
"We heard what you wrote," one said, thrusting a finger into Sam's chest. "You crossed a line."
"Some fucked-up shit, bro."
It was odd, because Sam's profligate sweat production usually didn't kick in until the threat had subsided.
"I didn't write it, and I'm not your"air quotes"bro."
He could have said that, but he didn't. He also could have explained why nothing was as it seemed. But he didn't. Instead, he just took it, as he always did in life on the crap side of the screen.
On the other side of the rabbi's door, on the other side of the rabbi's desk, sat Sam's parents, Jacob and Julia. They didn't want to be there. No one wanted to be there. The rabbi needed to embroider some thoughtful-sounding words about someone named Ralph Kremberg before they put him in the ground at two o'clock. Jacob would have preferred to be working on the bible for Ever-Dying People, or ransacking the house for his missing phone, or at least tapping the Internet's lever for some dopamine hits. And today was supposed to be Julia's day offthis was the opposite of off.
"Shouldn't Sam be in here?" Jacob asked.
"I think it's best if we have an adult conversation," Rabbi Singer said.
"Sam's an adult."
"Sam is not an adult," Julia said.
"Because he's three verses shy of mastering the blessings after the blessings after his haftorah?"
Ignoring Jacob, Julia put her hand on the rabbi's desk and said, "It's clearly unacceptable to talk back to a teacher, and we want to find a way to make this right."
"But at the same time," Jacob said, "isn't suspension a bit draconian for what, in the scheme of things, is not really that big a deal?"
"Jacob
"
"What?"
In an effort to communicate with her husband but not the rabbi, Julia pressed two fingers to her brow and gently shook her head while flaring her nostrils. She looked more like a third-base coach than a wife, mother, and member of the community attempting to keep the ocean from her son's sand castle.
"Adas Israel is a progressive shul," the rabbi said, eliciting an eye-roll from Jacob as reflexive as gagging. "We have a long and proud history of seeing beyond the cultural norms of any given moment, and finding the divine light, the Ohr Ein Sof, in every person. Using racial epithets here is a very big deal, indeed."
"What?" Julia asked, finding her posture.
"That can't be right," Jacob said.
The rabbi sighed a rabbi's sigh and slid a piece of paper across his desk to Julia.
"He said these?" Julia asked.
"He wrote them."
"Wrote what?" Jacob asked.
Excerpted from Here I Am by Jonathan Safran Foer. Copyright © 2016 by Jonathan Safran Foer. Excerpted by permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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