Scene4 Magazine: Arthur Meiselman
Arthur Meiselman
A Man For All Seasons But One
inView

December 2012

This is a story told to me by a college chum of mine who later became an intelligence operative for the American government. I'll keep it short with cloudy details because I haven't retold it much and I'm uncertain as to the outcome of the events and the relevance or danger of the facts today.

In 1992, a young man came to the attention of the Authorities and other interested non-governmental parties. He was eyed because his old Hungarian uncle began to talk about him indiscriminately whenever the old man loosened his tongue and sense of discretion with too much drink. It was hotly rumoured that the young man had developed or come into possession of a "Thing". Let's just call it that... a Thing. In all of its float-around variations, the rumour focused on an incredible assertion: the Thing had the power to make other things happen, to change anything into anything.

Imagine that. No one seemed to know precisely what that meant, how this device (was it a device?) worked, what its limits were (was it limitless?), and who did, could and would control it. Imagine that. Imagine the possibilities because that's what everyone else did at the time, imagine the possibilities, the assumptive facts as they vibrated out through the fantasy of the imagineers.

Apparently, the first to get to the young man and his Thing was not the government and its FBI/CIA minions. It was a consigliore from a New York Mafia family. His name was Tommy the Jew, (a typical gang moniker because Tommy was married to a Jewish lady and lived on the lower Eastside). His smooth-tongued, silky white-suit manner washed in and out of the ears of the young man. So he returned with two friends, hulking well-dressed no-necks named Vincent and Votan (Vinnie and Vo to their friends and victims). They offered him a life of riches, they bullied him, they threatened him, they terrified him. They tried to force the young man to show&tell the miracle of the Thing. How he avoided their persuasion and made them leave is unknown (they came back again many times in greater, grinning, darker numbers).

The next invasive wave that haunted the young man appeared as two FBI agents. They were both called Smith, both had short crew-cuts, both wore tailored dark suits and both wore dark glasses. They told him that he was on the 'list'. What list? They didn't say. What they did say was that he was a threat to National Security, that he could be sent to a "rendition" camp, that they would extract the information they wanted with great pain and harm to him. The young man was silent. They then did an about-face and with slight smiles urged him to be a good American citizen, to be loyal to flag and country, to save the American Dream. He was still silent. They told him: they wanted the Thing. He told them: he didn't know what they were talking about. He told them: there was nothing, he had no... Thing. They gave him a business card and said they would be back (they came back again many times with many more Smiths).

Another significant univited visit was a religious delegation: a Rabbi, an Imam, and a Monsignor. They addressed him in that order, for some reason, perhaps it had something to do with Tommy the Jew. They told him that Mankind has been waiting for the Thing since the dawning of... well... Mankind. They told him they knew that he was not the Savior but with their new vision of all the scriptural writings, of all of religious history, they knew he had the Savior in his hands, or wherever he had it. The young man was calm and silent. They cried, they pleaded with him. They held hands and danced around him, three holy men sweating in their holy garments. They fell to their knees moaning and singing and begging him to give them the salvation of all people, the instrument of the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth. He told them: he had nothing, he had no... Thing. They stared at him for a long, long time. Then they left, shuffling and muttering about reading the holy words again and telling him that they would return (which they did, many times, with more and more crying and pleading and singing people).

Somehow, all of this was kept from the hungry eyes of the Press. Nevertheless, the waves and floods of visitors and beseechers became unbearable. Crowds of ungainly, unorthodox, uncontrolled, imploring beggars entreating, pleading, pressing, demanding. There were times that if they weren't so menacingly bizarre, they would have been hilarious: Mafioso elbowing CIA agents, priests shoving missionaries, doctors back-handing hookers and lawyers (or vice versa). All desperate, yearning, obsessed. The chaos forced the young man to move, to hide again and again. But each time they found him. Until he evidently located a place that was not visible, off the map, a house behind a house. He lived there with a woman, a girlfriend, his lover. And he felt safe.

She was also young—lovely, bright, and exciting. And she was blind, from birth. They were happy together. One day, after many days of reclusive quiet, he sat in the living room reading. At one end of the room was a staircase that led to a bedroom loft with a balcony. The young lover suddenly appeared on the balcony clutching the railing with both hands.
She said to him: she needed his help. She said that now they were truly alone, that the craziness had disappeared, she wanted him to help her... she wanted him to use the Thing to give her the sight she never had.
After a long moment, he said, quietly: There is no Thing.
She said, more adamantly: There is, I know there is.
He said, again: No, there is nothing... no Thing.
She raised her voice: Why, why if you love me, why if you want me, why won't you do this for me?
He said: There is nothing.
She said, her voice louder and trembling: I've heard you, I've seen it, I know it exists, I've seen it.
He closed his eyes, his face tightened, he said: You've seen nothing.
She screamed at him: HELP ME!
He screamed back at her: I CAN'T!  
She screamed: WHY?
He said: Because... I DON'T...
As she ran to the top of the stairs she tripped, and fell down, first one flight of stairs, then another, until she lay at the bottom. He ran to her and evidently saw the pool of blood forming around her head. He evidently thought she was dead (she wasn't). He ran out of the house and vanished.

She recovered and she told all the interested parties everything she knew. They believed her. They searched for him for years. They had many leads, many sightings, many hopes.

He had disappeared. Vanished. Gone. Not a trace of him. It was as if he had never existed. Everyone who had met him knew he did because he was The Man with the Thing. And they were not.

Imagine that.

Share This Page

View other readers' comments in Letters to the Editor


©2012 Arthur Meiselman
©2012 Publication Scene4 Magazine

Arthur Meiselman is a playwright, writer and the Editor of Scene4.
He also directs the Talos Ensemble and produces for Aemagefilms

For more of his commentary and articles, check the Archives Excerpts of his writing Here

 

Scene4 Magazine - Arts and Media

®

December 2012

Cover | This Issue | inFocus | inView | reView | inSight | inPrint | Perspectives | Books | Blogs | Comments | Contacts&Links Masthead | Submissions | Advertising | Special Issues | Contact Us | Payments | Subscribe | Privacy | Terms | Archives

Search This Issue

 Share This Page

Scene4 (ISSN 1932-3603), published monthly by Scene4 Magazine - International Magazine of Arts and Media. Copyright © 2000-2012 AVIAR-DKA LTD - AVIAR MEDIA LLC. All rights reserved.

Now in our 13th year of publication with
comprehensive archives of over 7000 pages 

Scene4 Magazine - Thai Airways | www.scene4.com

 

Scene4 Magazine - Scientific American | www.scene4.com
Character Flaws by Les Marcott at www.aviarpress.com
Gertrude Stein-In Words and Pictures - Renate Stendhal