Vicki Pastor had given the best years of her life to social justice. She had marched with Martin and Ralph across the Pettis bridge, joined Freedom Riders in Montgomery, braved the ax handles and dogs of Bull Connor, and had come back to Washington to continue the struggle for equality, fairness, and good will.
She had put up with Ronald Reagan and the Bushes – conservative politicians of reasonably good will misinformed intentions. You couldn’t help but like Reagan, a jolly old soul with a self-deprecating sense of hum0r; and George Bush I was a patriot, whose noblesse oblige was memorable – WWII combat airman, long service in government, patient and dutiful Vice President, and finally Chief Executive. His son, George II was a bit of a cowboy but within reason, and took 9/11 with proper stolid American commitment; but the man now in the White House, Donald J Trump was another Republican altogether.
He was a bully, a racist, and a warmonger in bed with his Wall Street cronies and New York real estate mogul, a self-satisfied criminal who had avoided the law for himself but went on to abuse and distort it for ordinary Americans.
Vicki hated him with a visceral passion, an unrestrained,
immoderate, bilious hatred; and although she was not proud of such unchristian
behavior, she felt that such animus was called for. The more hatred for this hateful man, the
better.
It wasn’t just his politics that was so upsetting, but his lack of culture. The man was a crass, bourgeois caricature of America’s worst instincts. His yachts, his Mar-a-Lago, his glitz, faux glamour, and arm candy were revolting examples of his excess. His gross superficiality, his disdain for high culture and intellectual sophistication, his defiance of reasonable social norms and outright determination to create a cheap, tinsel-and-sequin Washington was disgusting.
Yet here she was in her later years, widowed, children in San Francisco and Paris, rarely invited out, disconsolate and feeling hopeless, with nothing but memories and Trump hatrcd to support her growing despair. ‘I need to do something’, she said; but the climate conferences, rallies on the National Mall, letters to the editor, and speaking at Vassar reunions was not enough.
She thought of Coleman Silk, the Phillip Roth character in
his The Human Stain who takes a much
younger woman as lover in his later years.
‘She’s not my first love nor my last’, he says to a censorious friend,
‘but she certainly is my last. Doesn’t that count for something?’
Men, Vicki knew, had it in them to take young lovers even at
seventy; yet here she was a shriveled up old prune whom no man wanted any more,
let alone a younger one. Men were the
lucky ones. Only a nice bank account and
a flat stomach – and not even that – could assure a December-May affair while
she languished alone, tending her petunias and hating Donald J Trump.
It was at the poetry reading she had arranged at her home,
an event to celebrate the works of a local artist whose verses had been
overlooked for the many decades she had been writing them, that she had an
epiphany, a conversion, a bright light of possibility.
The poet stood up before the gathering and began to read from her works – one treacly, predictable, crushingly adolescent poem after another. The guests smiled at a simile, shook their heads at a painful metaphor and took the whole brutal recital as though it was the Second Coming.
The theme, of course, was social justice. ‘Oh, what these eyes have seen’, she read, ‘and wept tears of love and warm embrace’ and from there went on to speak of the black man, ‘the sentient soul of the forest’, the inheritor of God’s first graces, noble creature maligned, dismissed, and damned.
This was only the beginning, for she went on and on until
even the adoring crowd began to grow restive;
but their love for the poet, her poetry, and her heartfelt emotion was
stirring, and they kept their attention.
But Vicki was shaken.
The poetry was so awful, so
irremediably bad, so self-assured in its miserable sentiments, that she had to
leave the room, down three shots of chilled Stoli, and turn the oven to
high. In a fit of pique and resentment
at her own idiocy, and with a hateful desire to be done with the whole
disgusting mess – the horrible poetry, the black man, the insufferable toadying
of her friends – she would burn the canapés to a crisp, serve them on a silver
tray, and watch her guests eat them, swallow the bitter bits and thank her
profusely.
‘No mas!’, she shouted as she drank another shot. ‘Basta’,
and with the last remaining reserves of patience let the old bitch finish
recital, sit down, and be feted. What
was she thinking? How could she have let
her sympathies go so far afield? She and
the event she had arranged were caricatures, horrible reminders of the
penitential years spent promoting old chestnuts, goodness, promise, halcyon
years to come.
‘Fuck ‘em’, she said, now drunk beyond control but relieved
of the Sisyphean burden of doing good once and for all. Like the Coleman Silk character, it was time
to give it up, clear the decks for running, and be done with it.
Her friends and colleagues could not believe the
transformation. Every last trace of her
fidelity, obedience to and respect for social justice was gone. What was left was a pissy, dismissive bitch
of a woman who had finally come into her own. She was off to parts unknown,
drawing down on her private income, so long hidden from the censorious view of
her progressive colleagues, and finally happy. Joyous actually, as only anyone
who has finally given a last goodbye to the sodden past can feel.
‘Fuck ‘em’, she said as she drove past the White House for
the last time, waving to the beautiful blonde young things along Pennsylvania
Avenue.







