Neon congress
School mates, Hossein's buffet and other impressions in Las Vegas
January 30, 2003
The Iranian
In life, some things ought to be experienced at least once. Las Vegas is one of them.
Recently, I went back there for a second look and returned with an unexpected sense
of awe, boundless joy.
My dimmed memory of the previous visit owed much to the passage of time, to be sure,
as it did also to the fact of an oil embargo which some thirty years ago had sucked
the juice out of the light bulbs and neon tubes that once lit up this tiny speck
in the middle of nowhere. While it was built up even then, the town was not much
of a place: a few boulevards, criss-crossing the desert, studded with casinos and
hotels and chapels and restaurants; the hinterland, where the help lived, stretched
modestly into the hills, sporadically, sparsely, in a series of unassuming buildings.
The only true attraction for miles and miles around was the fabled Hoover Dam, the
floodgate to the very bulging Lake Mead. Overall, Las Vegas was nothing remotely
resembling, much less matching, the grandeur of even the prosaic Monte Carlo.
Back then, we had reached this place from San Francisco by car and took up lodging
in a proverbial four-by-six room in a fleabag motel, on the frontier of the "strip,"
complete with noisy headboards, unstable mattresses, but great acoustics owed to
the paper-thin walls. Next time, I would fly there and stay in an upscale hotel dedicated
to the city of canals.
Not even wild horses could get me to go back to Vegas -- a reluctance that would
have required greater argument than cheap airfare, promise of lavish stage shows,
shopping, and gambling, as none of these pastimes, nor smoking, snorting or drinking
is my thing. What did spur me, however, to brave the travel from Los Angeles was
the promise of slipping into the warm bosom of high school memories, to listen to
life stories, to renew acquaintances, and to rekindle the friendships long ago doused
by neglect or dispersion. Deep down, though, I had grown curious recently of Vegas's
celebrated evolution from a proverbial hamlet to a metropolis shown on the television
series "CSI."
The night before leaving the City of Angels, over dinner at Darya with two of California's
angelic residents, Najib and Hossein, Hossein previewed some of the "must see"
attractions for me. He mentioned the magnificence of Bellagio's conservatory and
botanical gardens and the impressive musical fountains outside of the Mirage. None
of these however could have compared to his recommendation that I experience "the
buffet" at Bellagio. I love a good buffet and Vegas has them in spades. I promised
him that I would check it out, for sure, and so seeing the buffet at Bellagio became
my personal quest.
The flight Vegas on board Southwest took less than an hour, but from the moment when
the plane took off -- and made its three-quarter clockwise turn over the ocean before
heading inland -- I got the impression that the trip would not be a short one. I
kept thinking of the buffet, the word "buffet" kept repeating itself in
my head like a tenacious tune, "buffet, buffet, buffet," until it started
to sound like the American hackney "ba.fay." Being on a one-year diet,
may explain my obsessive preoccupation.
In the seat next to me was a petite blond clad in another airline's uniform -- moderately
attractive -- looking like any man's fantasy to be seated next to an attractive stewardess,
if not a uniformed nurse! Yet, in this confined space, I could not bridge the span
of my vast shyness separating reality from dream. By the time I deep-sixed the swirling
thoughts of the buffet, the fantastic one had fallen asleep. I felt liberated, free
to go back to my daydream about the buffet.
Looking down from twenty-eight thousand feet up, nature had spread its own buffet
below. Every inch of the desert, its many folds, traces of run-off water, creases,
crevices and folds, sandy dunes and rocky hillocks and outcrops told of an endless
growing pain through a millennium or more of unfinished time. Desolate, stark and
dry, some of the mountains rose pointedly, stretching their jagged peaks into the
whitish blue sky, while some other's looked like their upper floor was never finished,
with a flat-top, a crown looking like a cropped military haircut.
The approach to Vegas was awesome, too: the rugged mountain ranges now rose like
a fringe to surround the city, which lay jewel-like, helplessly, in the depression,
in the palm of this magnificent Martian landscape. The full moon could not wait until
dark: it was already out in the late afternoon hour, sitting impatiently and watching
the sun beat a slow and bloody retreat behind the hills.
If there is surrealism, I thought, it must look like Vegas at four-thirty in the
afternoon of a clear day in the middle of January -- the landing strip, against the
silhouette of the Vegas skyline, lit-up images of the hotels and resorts in the near
distance. The ride from the plane to the terminal, the overpopulation of slot machines,
and hundreds and hundreds of people milling about, everywhere, purposefully and orderly,
in patterns designed to move things along in a space-like colony where turn over
is king.
The ride from the airport to the hotel would have been eventless were it not for
a spectacular alignment of the moon. Already full, the moon had risen just so that
when I looked at it from the window of the minivan it had framed itself perfectly
in the letter "O" the sat atop of a billboard about the famed "Cercle
du Soleil" show. Amazing, I thought.
The check-in was uneventful. The room was spacious and comfortable. Amir was already
there since three o'clock. He and I said hello as if it were just yesterday we had
parted last August in Union City. We readied to join our schoolmates downstairs for
drinks. The familiar among them had grown older, some looking prosperous, some not,
and the unfamiliar soon became familiar. Among the stories told and retold that evening
I found proof in my newly formulated thesis that people with a prolonged boarding
school experience are more likely to experience marital nightmare, leading often
to at least one divorce or no marriage at all. The reason for this, I have postulated,
is that conduct in boarding school is regimented, ordered, prescribed and scripted
and, consequently, a boarder learns next to nothing about negotiating differences,
to give-and-take, to compromise, to communicate effectively, to manipulate, to dissimulate,
to dissemble, to go along, to get along. For most, when the school-year was over
and one reunited with one's family, dutiful pleasing of the parents provided little
time for an unencumbered learning about conflict resolution.
Most of the stories I heard were of sacrifice. One schoolmate shared with whomever
cared to lend an ear that she left the Emirates and her marriage to an American when
it had become clear to her that staying on would end up in bodily harm to her; decades
ago she flew back to the States and raised her daughter all on her own. She earns
a living as an accountant and on her free time, if any, she dances a part in the
Nutcracker every winter with the local ballet company. Her daughter now has a child
of her own. To me, however, she, who is now in her mid-to-late forties and remarried,
will always be one of the "Aramco Brats," whose parent worked for the Arabian-American
Oil Company in Saudi Arabia, who frequently went down to the "Persian Gulf,"
as she put it, and skinny dipped in its warm waters off Dhahran.
Another schoolmate related that she had been married for sometime before a divorce
send her and her daughter into a life of their own, in which she gave birth to a
second child without the benefit of a second nuptial; finally, some twenty-odd years
later she recently left Europe for the safety of the New York area, one kid in college
and the other nearly so. She works in public relations.
A third schoolmate had come all the way from northern Canada, where he plies his
trade as a petroleum engineer. He and the Mrs. were no strangers to Las Vegas, where
for years they have vacationed, with the kids and all. They, like people who knew
what they were doing, rented a car and hit all the discount places and outlet stores.
Last but not least, was another schoolmate, with an incredibly giddy personality,
with a contagious laughter. She listened more than she talked about her life: blissfully
married, she works and plays in Long Beach, California.
None in the group that I just described had shared a single meal when in boarding
school; gender, class year, and age differences were the defining criteria then.
Yet we all understood this night that reunions are as much about catching up than
they are about going forward, giving perhaps birth to memories that we will revisit
some years down the road as the shared experience of this reunion. To this lot, already
bored by 11 o'clock, and hungry, I sold the idea of visiting the buffet at Bellagio.
We left the cocktail reception and its run-of-the-mill finger food and piled into
Mike's super-economy sedan. He and his wife took over the front seats, and the rest
of us -- all four -- squeezed tightly in the back seat, with the help of the doorman
who pushed the door shut with great exertion against the Giddy One's rump.
The ride to Bellagio was a barrel of fun, reminiscent of the unruly school excursions.
For one thing, it was observed, over and over, by the Giddy One that Flamingo hotel
housed famous penguins! Yes, it did and we bought her a small stuff penguin on the
morrow as a souvenir. The Ballerina kept chiding the architects who managed to cram
the look-alike of the Acropolis next to Caesar's Palace, on the same parcel of real
estate. It was noted with great hilarity that in a thousand years from now the archaeologists
would want to know why the replica of these two edifices in the land of the Greeks
and Romans across the ocean were built later so far apart from one another!
The Paris, with its mini-Eiffel tower, dazzled. I could not help but remind the group
that the person in charge of the mathematics of this replica's project was an Iranian
engineer. Of course that went over big coming from one who all through high school
claimed everything began in Persia!
When reached Bellagio. Mike, the engineer, and very knowledgeable about potential
energy, requested that we open the back doors gently so that the people sitting at
the ends, with their butts tightly compressed against others, would not shoot out
of the car like a missile. The mere thought of such a release was enough to send
us reeling with side-splitting laughter.
We entered the palatial foyer of Bellagio. Murals were everywhere, on the walls,
on the ceilings, tall and short. Marbles covered the floors. The botanical garden
offered its gaudy attractions in plain view; the gold fish, each the size of a size
seven shoe, floated in the tank. Impressive, yes, but pointless.
We wandered about looking for the buffet. It had closed for the night.
The Hossein "buffet posse," disappointed but undeterred, instead took in
a light but intimate supper at a regular diner, while admiring the kitsch. It was
resolved that in the morrow the group would make another effort to reach the buffet.
No agreement was reached as to time and it was left to me to arrive there before
noon and then signal the rest of the band to join in. The posse dropped me off at
my hotel. I asked the concierge for a wake-up call around seven-thirty: it was important
to get to the buffet on time, when all was still fresh. Soon I will learn that because
of the turn over, everything is fresh all the time.
Amir was already in bed, exhausted from a long night's delights, none of which included
anything remotely carnal. I had had more fun being in the overcrowded back seat of
a sedan. Farzin, our mutual friend, had already left Amir's side for his own hotel.
Reminiscing about the year that we had roomed in boarding school, Amir and I chatted
with the lights off. Before any of us drifted into sleep we had resolved to check
out the buffet together in the morning.
I awoke first and procured us a few cups of coffee from the cafeteria downstairs.
Amir called Farzin and pitched to him the idea of the buffet and finally by ten o'clock
we were at Farzin's hotel ready to pick him up. His roommate was still in the shower.
It took him a good forty-five minutes to get ready. So by 11 o'clock we were four
and on the way to the buffet. In the lobby of Farzin's hotel, Farzin's roommate ran
into a few of his classmates and, before I knew it, it took another hour to get on
the way. The new "buffet posse" -- five in all -- began the long interrupted
walk to Bellagio.
The line to the buffet stretched for a good length of the football field. Yet, it
moved quickly. We each paid the $23 price for the unlimited buffet and entered the
forum. Eating out in America is a sport, eating well is a spectator sport. This was
a veritable circus: from the proverbial camel's egg to the even more proverbial chicken
milk had been assembled in an area called the "ba.fay." Pastries of all
kind, with or without pedigree, straight or gay, nutty or fruity, black, brown, yellow,
white or red, sticky or powdery, sweet or semi-sweet or not. In another station,
fruits of all kind, tropical to super-market, round or long, fuzzy or slick, in all
colors, with seed or without. Another area housed the breakfast meats: sausages of
all sizes, long, skinny long, thick and stout, seasoned or not, slightly arched or
straight as a pencil. Sushi everywhere. Cereals of all kind. Eggs of all makes, some
prepared to one's liking on the spot. Pancakes. Roast beef and other roasted flesh.
Shrimp in three sizes: tiny, medium, and jumbo, icy-fresh and cooked to perfection.
Sushi rolls. Scottish salmon. Vegetables and legume of every description, including
a delicious blend of endive and radicchio. Bread: round, long, flat, raised, oblong,
and some obliquely bread. Jams and spreads heaped in huge bottomless baskets.
Naturally, this corner of the world had nothing to do with the greater percentage
of earth's humanity or how little it took to feed a child from the brink of starvation.
If guilt was one's trip, this was the morgue. As far as buffets went, however, this
was it. How much $23 could buy here was impressive. More so, I was impressed by the
order of this spread: no bumping into another, no elbowing, no stepping on someone
else's foot. There was a remarkable calm to this: serenity engendered by plenty --
that, all will eat and eat enough of everything. I did eat, to the extent that my
smallish built and diet permitted.
Meals like this do not have a half-point. One measures the mid-point by the retroactive
division of one's stay by two. Sometime, in the mid-point of the meal, the three
of the posse from the night before arrived, exhausted from shopping; Mike and his
wife had enough left however to forgo the buffet for yet another outlet.
After the buffet, which stood up to its reputation and exceeded anyone's expectation,
we split off into two groups. I along with three others walked the streets looking
for souvenirs and adjourned into the Paris for a make-belief espresso. The ersatz
surrounded this venue. We knew it and yet we managed to go along with it. Two things
however disappointed even more than the fake tree that sheltered us -- one was Expresso!
The other that the Expresso was served in paper cups. Never in Paris.
Strolling along the main drag, we stopped at the musical fountains. It was a most
impressive and breathtaking combination of music and jet d'eau, synchronized to such
precision that when the noise of the falling water hit the surface it corresponded
with the beats of the percussion in Elton John's candle in the wind, or the cadence
in a symphonic piece, or the bursting of rockets during the Star-Spangled Banner,
all amazing, glorious.
That night we -- all hundred or so schoolmates -- assembled at a tiny restaurant
in the northern edge of the city. Quaint, mellow. Conversation flowed effortlessly;
occasional silence or lull in the conversation was not an embarrassment. The tall
and statuesque blond from Florida had me in stitches still over her remark from the
night before. When I asked to what she attributed her divorce a few years back, she
had replied that it had nothing to do with boarding school and everything to do with
her husband's boyfriend! Now, she was there with her colleague, a brave man whose
birthday we all serenaded as if he were one of us.
The "senior ditch day" which had become a tradition from 1972 onward had
begun in the spring 1971, when my class left school en masse to protest something
or another. Nothing was fixed as the result of it, except that for the rest of the
semester we worked double to erase the F's that were doled out in punishment. The
school's much-heralded soccer championships that had become the legend of Europe,
too, began, with the 1970-71 team, coinciding with the time when myself, my dear
friend Mac, and a few others, arrived there after our school closed its doors at
the end of our eleventh grade.
The speeches that beckoned a moment of quiet in order to be heard were heard despite
the noise, only because what was said was already heard, felt deep in each of us.
This was not a reunion, because many of the crowd that sat elbow to elbow, breath
to breath, never knew each other in that other life. This was more like a congress,
with representatives from different places and generations all assembled in one location
from across great divides -- of nationality, age, gender, ethnicity, race, socio-economic
backgrounds, and even dress -- one clad in the most revealing decollete evening gown,
another wrapped in a religious garb revealing a different personal preference.
The next day, I woke early to leave for the airport. Amir awoke just long enough
to give me a hug goodbye. The ride to the airport was short and sweet, as most of
Vegas' revelers chose to sleep- in on that Sunday morning. I financed the ride from
the modest winnings that had resulted the night before from an impetuous investment
of a single quarter in the slot machine in the lobby of my hotel.
Being raised abroad for most of my life and having been fortunate enough to have
seen and learned as much as I have experienced first hand, and still by all means
with room to spare, very little impresses me or should. Every instinct in my body
had told me beforehand that it was all fake and unimpressive. Nothing about it had
been impressive, until the plane took off. Looking down at the speck in the middle
of nowhere, I closed my eyes for a moment, and accepted without reservation the inevitable
resolution that ... it had been all very impressive. Hossein's buffet, too, had left
its impression.
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