The Lords of Discipline

The Lords of Discipline by Pat Conroy Page B

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Authors: Pat Conroy
Tags: Fiction, Literary, Suspense, Coming of Age, Thrillers, Ebook
kissed me on the lips. She held the kiss for several seconds; it was chaste, motherly, the way women always kissed me. Her eyes were invisible in the shadows cast by the streetlight.
    “How does that make you feel, Will?” Abigail asked softly. “Does that make you feel better?”
    “It makes me feel hopeful that Commerce isn’t watching, that your friends don’t see us, that nobody sees us,” I said blushing.
    “Oh, Commerce wouldn’t care what I did. He hasn’t cared about things like that for years. For decades. It was a friendly gesture, Will. You’re like a son to me and I’m trying to build up your confidence. I hope I didn’t embarrass you. I don’t pull off things like that very well.”
    “I’m glad you did it, Abigail,” I said, and now I could see that she was embarrassed, too.
    I did not know if Abigail could really gauge the extent of my inexperience with women, my absolute lack of confidence around them, my fear of them. But I suspected she knew it instinctively. My virginity was settling in hard on me. It seemed both silly and rather affectingly pitiful that a twenty-one-year-old male with awesome enthusiasm and all his parts intact had not managed to make love to a single woman. Though I had taken no vows of chastity, women responded to me as though I were an affable rural curate with no thunder in my pants. It was not that I lacked the desire, the necessary heat: There was something almost nuclear about the lust. Sex had become the central, consuming obsession in my life. It charged the cells of my blood with energy, jewel-fire light, and the sweet forbidden glucose of sin. Restless and on the prowl, I had entered my young manhood tired and desperate to be done with these sexless days, though sexless is not completely accurate. Cadets become clandestine but brilliantly imaginative masturbators of a very high order. Show me a product of a military school and I will show you a man who can beat off without moving a muscle, without rustling a sheet.
    I had once read in a book that traced the natural history of blue whales that the great creatures often had to travel thousands of miles through the dark waters of the Pacific Ocean to find a mate. They conducted their search with the fever and furious attention of beasts aware of the imminence of extinction. As the whaling fleets depleted their numbers, scientists conjectured that there were whales who would exhaust themselves in fruitless wandering and never connect with any mate at all. When I read about those solitary leviathans, I feared I had stumbled on an allegory of my own life, that I would spend my life unable to make a connection, unable to find someone attracted by the beauty and urgency of my song. Sometimes I felt like an endangered species.
    Holding hands, Abigail and I walked for thirty minutes through those charmed, lovely streets South of Broad. It was 11:30 when I left her house to return to the barracks. As I opened my car door, I saw a note stuck in the windshield wiper.
    I read it beneath the streetlight, my eyes straining to decipher the feathery, feminine script. The note was brief but to the point: “You have no right to park here. Tourists and cadets are ruining Charleston. Please park your car somewhere else or I will call the police.” There was no signature.
    I looked around in the darkness. There was nothing illegal or impertinent about where I had parked, nothing at all. Before I got into the car, however, I saw a girl watching me from the unlit entrance to Stoll’s Alley, twenty yards away. She was wearing a scarf, a raincoat, and a pair of sunglasses.
    When she realized I had seen her, she turned and began walking quickly down the narrow alleyway. I sprinted after her. She had not gotten very far. It was difficult navigating a tree-shaded Charleston lane wearing sunglasses as the hour approached midnight.
    She stopped suddenly and wheeled toward me as I approached.
    “Did you leave this note on my car?” I

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