dove , he would call her.
âShall we go to my office?â he says instead.
With the boyfriend trailing behind, he leads her up the stairway to his office. âWait here,â he tells the boy, and closes the door on him.
Melanie sits before him, her head sunken. âMy dear,â he says, âyou are going through a difficult time, I know that, and I donât want to make it more difficult. But I must speak to you as a teacher. I have obligations to my students, all of them. What your friend does off campus is his own business. But I canât have him disrupting my classes. Tell him that, from me.
âAs for yourself, you are going to have to give more time to your work. You are going to have to attend class more regularly. And you are going to have to make up the test you missed.â
She stares back at him in puzzlement, even shock. You have cut me off from everyone , she seems to want to say. You have made me bear your secret. I am no longer just a student. How can you speak to me like this?
Her voice, when it comes, is so subdued that he can barely hear: âI canât take the test, I havenât done the reading.â
What he wants to say cannot be said, not decently. All he can do is signal, and hope that she understands. âJust take the test, Melanie, like everyone else. It does not matter if you are not prepared, the point is to get it behind you. Let us set a date. How about next Monday, during the lunch break? That will give you the weekend to do the reading.â
She raises her chin, meets his eye defiantly. Either she has not understood or she is refusing the opening.
âMonday, here in my office,â he repeats.
She rises, slings her bag over her shoulder.
âMelanie, I have responsibilities. At least go through the motions. Donât make the situation more complicated than it need be.â
Responsibilities: she does not dignify the word with a reply.
Driving home from a concert that evening, he stops at a traffic light. A motorcycle throbs past, a silver Ducati bearing two figures in black. They wear helmets, but he recognizes them nevertheless. Melanie, on the pillion, sits with knees wide apart, pelvis arched. A quick shudder of lust tugs him. I have been there! he thinks. Then the motorcycle surges forward, bearing her away.
FIVE
S HE DOES NOT appear for her examination on Monday. Instead, in his mailbox he finds an official withdrawal card: Student 771010ISAM Ms M Isaacs has withdrawn from COM 312 with immediate effect.
Barely an hour later a telephone call is switched through to his office. âProfessor Lurie? Have you a moment to talk? My name is Isaacs, Iâm calling from George. My daughter is in your class, you know, Melanie.â
âYes.â
âProfessor, I wonder if you can help us. Melanie has been such a good student, and now she says she is going to give it all up. It has come as a terrible shock to us.â
âIâm not sure I understand.â
âShe wants to give up her studies and get a job. It seems such a waste, to spend three years at university and do so well, and then drop out before the end. I wonder if I can ask, Professor, can you have a chat with her, talk some sense into her?â
âHave you spoken to Melanie yourself? Do you know what is behind this decision?â
âWe spent all weekend on the phone to her, her mother and I, but we just canât get sense out of her. She is very involved in a play she is acting in, so maybe she is, you know, overworked, overstressed. She always takes things so to heart, Professor, thatâs her nature, she gets very involved. But if you talk to her, maybe you can persuade her to think again. She has such respect for you. We donât want her to throw away all these years for nothing.â
So Melanie-Meláni, with her baubles from the Oriental Plaza and her blind spot for Wordsworth, takes things to heart. He would not have guessed it. What