A Separate Peace online book

(Joyce) #1

I spent as much time as I could alone in our room, trying to empty my mind of every thought, to
forget where I was, even who I was. One evening when I was dressing for dinner in this numbed
frame of mind, an idea occurred to me, the first with any energy behind it since Finny fell from
the tree. I decided to put on his clothes. We wore the same size, and although he always
criticized mine he used to wear them frequently, quickly forgetting what belonged to him and
what to me. I never forgot, and that evening I put on his cordovan shoes, his pants, and I looked
for and finally found his pink shirt, neatly laundered in a drawer. Its high, somewhat stiff collar
against my neck, the wide cuffs touching my wrists, the rich material against my skin excited a
sense of strangeness and distinction; I felt like some nobleman, some Spanish grandee.


But when I looked in the mirror it was no remote aristocrat I had become, no character out of
daydreams. I was Phineas, Phineas to the life. I even had his humorous expression in my face,
his sharp, optimistic awareness. I had no idea why this gave me such intense relief, but it
seemed, standing there in Finny’s triumphant shirt, that I would never stumble through the
confusions of my own character again.


I didn’t go down to dinner. The sense of transformation stayed with me throughout the evening,
and even when I undressed and went to bed. That night I slept easily, and it was only on waking
up that this illusion was gone, and I was confronted with myself, and what I had done to Finny.


Sooner or later it had to happen, and that morning it did. “Finny’s better!” Dr. Stanpole called to
me on the chapel steps over the organ recessional thundering behind us. I made my way haltingly
past the members of the choir with their black robes flapping in the morning breeze, the doctor’s
words reverberating around me. He might denounce me there before the whole school. Instead he
steered me amiably into the lane leading toward the infirmary. “He could stand a visitor or two
now, after these very nasty few days.”


“You don’t think I’ll upset him or anything?”


“You? No, why? I don’t want any of these teachers flapping around him. But a pal or two, it’ll
do him good.”


“I suppose he’s still pretty sick.”


“It was a messy break.”


“But how does he—how is he feeling? I mean, is he cheerful at all, or—”


“Oh, you know Finny.” I didn’t, I was pretty sure I didn’t know Finny at all. “It was a messy
break,” he went on, “but we’ll have him out of it eventually. He’ll be walking again.”


“Walking again!”


“Yes.” The doctor didn’t look at me, and barely changed his tone of voice. “Sports are finished
for him, after an accident like that. Of course.”

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