Raise High
the Roof Beam, Carpenters
The
New Yorker, November 19, 1955, pages 51-58, 60, 62, 65-66, 70, 72-74, 76, 78-80,
83-84, 86, 88-90, 92, 94-98, 101-102, 104-105, 107-112, 114-116
One night some twenty years ago, during a siege of mumps in our enormous family,
my youngest sister, Franny, was moved, crib and all, into the ostensibly germ-free
room I shared with my eldest brother, Seymour. I was fifteen, Seymour was seventeen.
Along about two in the morning, the new roommate's crying wakened me. I lay
in a still, neutral position for a few minutes, listening to the racket, till
I heard, or felt, Seymour stir in the bed next to mine. In those days, we kept
a flashlight on the night table between us, for emergencies that, as far as
I remember, never arose. Seymour turned it on and got out of bed. 'The bottle's
on the stove, Mother said,' I told bin. ' I gave it to her a little while ago,'
Seymour said. 'She isn't hungry.' He went over in the dark to a bookcase and
beamed the flashlight slowly back and forth along the stacks. I sat up in bed.
'What arc you going to do?' I said. 'I thought maybe I'd read something to her,'
Seymour said, and took down a book. 'She's ten months old, for God's sake,'
I said. 'I know,' Seymour said. 'They have ears. They can hear.'
The story Seymour read to Franny that night, by flashlight, was a favorite of
his, a Taoist tale. To this day, Franny swears that she remembers Seymour reading
it to her:
Duke Mu of Chin said to Po Lo: 'You are now advanced in years. Is there any
member of your family whom I could employ to look for horses in your stead?'
Po Lo replied: 'A good horse can be picked out by its general build and appearance.
But the superlative horse - one that raises no dust and leaves no tracks - is
something evanescent and fleeting, elusive as thin air. The talents of my sons
lie on a lower plane altogether; they call tell a good horse when they see one,
but they cannot tell a superlative horse. I have a friend, however, one Chin-fang
Kao, a hawker of fuel and vegetables, who in things appertaining to horses is
nowise my inferior. Pray see him.'
Duke Mu did so, and subsequently dispatched him on the quest for a steed. Three
months later, lie returned with the news that lie had found one. 'It is now
in Shach'iu,' he added.' What kind of a horse is it?'asked the Duke. 'Oh, it
is a dun-colored mare,' was the reply. However, someone being sent to fetch
it, the annual turned out to be a coal-black stallion! Much displeased, the
Duke sent for Po Lo. 'That friend of yours,' lie said, 'whom I commissioned
to look for a horse, has made a fine mess of it. Why, lie cannot even distinguish
a beast's color or sex! What oil earth can he know about horses?' Po Lo heaved
a sigh of satisfaction. 'Has he really got as far as that?' he cried. 'Ah, then
he is worth ten thousand of me put together. There is no comparison between
us. What Kao keeps in view is the spiritual mechanism. hi making sure of the
essential, he forgets the homely details; intent on the inward qualities, lie
loses sight of the external. He sees what he wants to see, and not what he does
not want to see. He looks at the things he ought to look at, and neglects those
that need not be looked at. So clever a judge of horses is Kao, that lie has
it in him to judge something better than horses.'
When the horse arrived, it turned out indeed to be a superlative animal.
I've reproduced the tale here not just because I invariably go out of my way
to recommend a good prose pacifier to parents or older brothers often-month-old
babies but for quite another reason. What directly follows is an account of
a wedding day in 1942. It is, in my opinion, a self-contained account, with
a beginning and an end, and a mortality, all its own. Yet, because I'm in possession
of the fact, I feel I must mention that the bridegroom is now, in 1955, no longer
living. He committed suicide in 1948, while he was on vacation in Florida with
his wife.... Undoubtedly, though, what I'm really getting at is this: Since
the bridegroom's permanent retirement from the scene, I haven't been able to
think of anybody whom I'd care to send out to look for horses in his stead.
In late May of 1942, the progeny - seven in number - of Les and Bessie (Gallagher)
Glass, retired Pantages Circuit vaudevillians, were flung, extravagantly speaking,
all over the United States. I, for one, the second-eldest, was in the post hospital
at Fort Benning, Georgia, with pleurisy - a little keepsake of thirteen weeks'
infantry basic training. Tile twins, Walt and Waker, had been split up a whole
year earlier. Waker was in a conscientious objectors' camp in Maryland, and
Walt was somewhere in the Pacific - or on his way there - with a fieldartillery
unit. (We've never been altogether sure where Walt was at that specific time.
He was never a great letter writer, and very little personal information - almost
none - reached us after his death. He was killed in an unspeakably absurd G.I.
accident in late autumn of 1945, in Japan.) My eldest sister, Boo Boo, who comes,
chronologically, between the twins and me, was an ensign in the Waves, stationed,
off and on, at a naval base in Brooklyn. All that spring and summer, she occupied
the small apartment in New York that my brother Seymour and I had all but technically
given up after our induction. The two youngest children in the family, Zooey
(male) and Franny (female), were with our parents in Los Angeles, where my fit
her was hustling talent for a motion-picture studio. Zooey was thirteen, and
Franny was eight. They were both appearing every week on a children's radio
quiz program called, with perhaps typically pungent Coast-to-Coast irony, 'It's
a Wise Child'. At one time or another, I night well bring in here - or, rather,
in one year or another - all the children in our family have been weekly hired'
guests' on' It's a Wise Child'. Seymour and I were the first to appear on the
show, back in 1927, at the respective ages often and eight, in the days when
the program 'emanated' from one of the convention rooms of the old Murray Hill
Hotel. All seven of us, from Seymour through Franny, appeared on the show under
pseudonyms. Which may sound highly anomalous, considering that we're the children
of vaudevillians, a sect not usually antipathetic to publicity, but my mother
had once read a magazine article on the little crosses professional children
are obliged to bear - their estrangement from normal, presumably desirable society
- and she took an iron stand on the issue, and never, never wavered. (This is
not the time at all to go into the question of whether most, or all, 'professional'
children ought to be outlawed, pitied, or unsentimentally executed as disturbers
of the peace. For the moment, I'll only pass along that our combined income
on 'It's a Wise Child' has sent six of us through college, and is now sending
the seventh.)
Our eldest brother, Seymour - with whom I'm all but exclusively concerned here
- was a corporal in what, in 1942, was still called the Air Corps. He was stationed
at a B-17 base in California, where, I believe, he was an acting company clerk.
I might add, not quite parenthetically, that he was by far the least prolific
letter writer in the family. I don't think I've had five letters from him in
my life.
On the morning of either 22 or 23 May (no one in my family has ever dated a
letter), a letter from my sister Boo Boo was placed on the foot of my cot in
the post hospital at Fort Benning while my diaphragm was being strapped with
adhesive tape (a usual medical procedure with pleurisy patients, presumably
guaranteed to prevent them from coughing themselves to pieces). When the ordeal
was over, I read Boo Boo's letter. I still have it, and it follows here verbatim:
Dear
Buddy,
I'm in a terrible rush to pack, so this will be short but penetrating. Admiral
Behind-pincher has decided that lie must fly to parts unknown for the war effort
and has also decided to take his secretary with him if I behave myself. I'm
just sick about it. Seymour aside, it means Quonset huts in freezing air bases
and boyish passes from our fighting men and those horrible paper things to get
sick in on the plane. The point is, Seymour is getting married - yes, married,
so please pay attention. I can't be there. I may be gone for anywhere from six
weeks to two months on this trip. I've met the girl. She's a zero in my opinion
but terrific-looking. I don't actually know that she's a zero. I mean she hardly
said two words the night I met her. Just sat and smiled and smoked, so it isn't
fair to say. I don't know anything about the romance itself at all, except that
they apparently met when Seymour was stationed at Monmouth last winter. The
mother is the end - a finger in all the arts, and sees a good Jungian man twice
a week (she asked me twice, the night I met her, if I'd ever been analyzed).
She told me she just wishes Seymour would relate to more people. In the same
breath, said she just loves him, though, etc., etc., and that she used to listen
to him religiously all the years lie was on the air. That's all I know except
that you've got to get to the wedding. I'll never forgive you if you don't.
I mean it. Mother and Daddy can't get here from the Coast. Franny has the measles,
for one thing. Incidentally, did you hear her last week? She went on at beautiful
length about how she used to fly all around the apartment when she was four
and no one was home. The new announcer is worse than Grant - if possible, even
worse than Sullivan in the old days. He said she surely just dreamt that she
was able to fly. The baby stood her ground like an angel. She said she knew
she was able to fly because when she came down she always had dust on her fingers
from touching the light bulbs. I long to see her. You, too. Anyhow, you've got
to get to the wedding. Go A.W.O.L. if you have to, but please go. It's at three
o'clock, June 4th. Very non-sectarian and Emancipated, at her grandmother's
house on 63rd. Some judge is marrying them. I don't know the number of the house,
but it's exactly two doors down from where Carl and Amy used to live in luxury.
I'm going to wire Walt, but I think he's been shipped out already. Please get
there, Buddy. He weighs about as much as a cat and he has that ecstatic look
on his face that you can't talk to. Maybe it's going to be perfectly all right,
but I hate 1942. I think I'll hate 1942 till I die, just on general principles.
All my love and see you when I get back.
Boo Boo
A
couple of days after the letter arrived, I was discharged from the hospital,
in the custody, so to speak, of about three yards of adhesive tape around my
ribs. Then began a very strenuous week's campaign to get permission to attend
the wedding. I was finally able to do it by laboriously ingratiating myself
with my company commander, a bookish man by his own confession, whose favorite
author, as luck had it, happened to be my favorite author - L. Manning Vines.
Or Hinds. Despite this spiritual bond between us, the most I could wangle out
of him was a three-day pass, which would, at best, give me just enough time
to travel by train to New York, sec the wedding, bolt a dinner somewhere, and
then return damply to Georgia.
All sit-up coaches on trains in 1942 were only nominally ventilated, as I remember,
abounded with M.P.s, and smelled of orange juice, milk, and rye whiskey. I spent
the night coughing and reading a copy of Ace Comics that someone was kind enough
to lend me. When the train pulled into New York - at ten after two on the afternoon
of the wedding - I was coughed out, generally exhausted, perspiring, unpressed,
and my adhesive tape was itching hellishly. New York itself was indescribably
hot. I had no time to go to my apartment first, so I left my luggage, which
consisted of a rather oppressive-looking little canvas zipper bag, in one of
those steel boxes at Penn Station. To make things still more provocative, as
I was wandering around in the garment district trying to find an empty cab,
a second lieutenant in the Signal Corps, whom I'd apparently overlooked saluting,
crossing Seventh Avenue, suddenly took out a fountain pen and wrote down my
name, serial number, and address while a number of civilians looked interestedly
on.
I was limp when I finally got into a cab. I gave the driver directions that
would take me at least as far as 'Carl and Amy's' old house. As soon as we arrived
in that block, however, it was very simple. One just followed the crowd. There
was even a canvas canopy. A moment later, I entered an enormous old brownstone
and was met by a very handsome, lavender-haired woman, who asked me whether
I was a friend of the bride or the groom. I said the groom. 'Oh,' she said,
'well, we're just bunching everybody up together.' She laughed rather immoderately,
and showed me to what seemed to be the last vacant folding chair in a very crowded
outsize room. I have a thirteen-year-old blackout in my mind with regard to
the over-all physical details of the room. Beyond the fact that it was jam-packed
and stifling hot, I can remember only two things: that there was an organ playing
almost directly behind me, and that the woman in the seat directly at my right
turned to me and enthusiastically stage-whispered, 'I'm Helen Silsburn!' From
the location of our seats, I gathered that she was not the bride's mother, but,
to play it safe, I smiled and nodded gregariously, and was about to say who
I was, but she put a decorous finger to her lips, and we both faced front. It
was then, roughly, three o'clock. I closed my eyes and waited, a trifle guardedly,
for the organist to quit the incidental music and plunge into 'Lohengrin'.
I haven't a very clear idea of how the next hour and a quarter passed, aside
from the cardinal fact that there was no plunging into 'Lohengrin'. I remember
a little dispersed band of unfamiliar faces that surreptitiously turned around,
now and then, to sec who was coughing. And I remember that the woman at my right
addressed me once again, in the same rather festive whisper. 'There must be
some delay,' she said. 'Have you ever seen Judge Ranker? He has the face of
a saint.' And I remember the organ music veering peculiarly, almost desperately,
at one point, from Bach to early Rodgers and Hart. On the whole, though, I'm
afraid, I passed the time paying little sympathetic hospital calls on myself
for being obliged to suppress my coughing spells. I had a sustained, cowardly
notion, the entire time I was in the room, that I was about to hemorrhage, or,
at the very least, fracture a rib, despite the corset of adhesive tape I was
wearing.
At
twenty minutes past four - or, to put it another, blunter way, an hour and twenty
minutes past what seemed to be all reasonable hope - the unmarried bride, her
head down, a parent stationed on either side of her, was helped out of the building
and conducted, fragilely, down a long flight of stone steps to the sidewalk.
She was then deposited - almost hand over hand, it seemed - into the first of
the sleek black hired cars that were waiting, double-parked, at the curb. It
was an excessively graphic moment - a tabloid moment - and, as tabloid moments
go, it had its full complement of eyewitnesses, for the wedding guests (myself
among them) had already begun to pour out of the building, however decorously,
in alert, not to say goggle-eyed, droves. If there was any even faintly lenitive
aspect of the spectacle, the weather itself was responsible for it. The June
sun was so hot and so glaring, of such multi-flashbulblike mediacy, that the
image of the bride, as she made her almost invalided way down the stone steps,
tended to blur where blurring mattered most.
Once the bridal car was at least physically removed from the scene, the tension
on the sidewalk - especially around the mouth of the canvas canopy, at the curb,
where I, for one, was loitering - deteriorated into what, had the building been
a church, and had it been a Sunday, might have been taken for fairly normal
congregation-dispersing confusion. Then, very suddenly, the emphasized word
came - reportedly from the bride's Uncle Al - that the wedding guests were to
use the cars standing at the curb; that is, reception or no reception, change
of plans or no change of plans. If the reaction in my vicinity was any criterion,
the offer was generally received as a kind of beau geste. It didn't quite go
without saying, however, that the cars were to be 'used' only after a formidable-looking
platoon of people - referred to as the bride's 'immediate family' - had taken
what transportation they needed to quit the scene. And, after a somewhat mysterious
and bottleneck-like delay (during which I remained peculiarly riveted to the
spot), 'the immediate family' did indeed begin to make its exodus, as many as
six or seven persons to a car, or as few as three or four. The number, gathered,
depended upon the age, demeanour, and hip spread of the first occupants in possession.
Suddenly, at someone's parting - but markedly crisp - suggestion, I found myself
stationed at the curb, directly at the mouth of the canvas canopy, attending
to helping people into cars.
How I had been singled out to fill this post deserves some small speculation.
So far as I know, the unidentified, middleaged man of action who had picked
me for the job hadn't a glimmer of a notion that I was the bridegroom's brother.
Therefore, it seems logical that I was singled out for other, far less poetic
reasons. The year was 1942. 1 was twenty-three, and newly drafted into the Army.
It strikes me that it was solely my age, my uniform, and the unmistakably serviceable,
olivedrab aura about me that had left no doubt concerning my eligibility to
fill in as doorman.
I was not only twenty-three but a conspicuously retarded twenty-three. I remember
loading people into cars without any degree of competence whatever. On the contrary,
I went about it with a certain disingenuous, cadetlike semblance of single-mindedness,
of adherence to duty. After a few minutes, inn fact, I became all too aware
that I was catering to the needs of a predominantly older, shorter, fleshier
generation, and my performance as an arm taker and door closer took on an even
more thoroughly bogus puissance. I began to conduct myself like an exceptionally
adroit, wholly engaging young giant with a cough.
But the heat of the afternoon was, to say the least, oppressive, and the compensations
of my office must have seemed to me increasingly tokenless. Abruptly, though
the crowd of 'immediate fancily' seemed scarcely to have begun to thin out,
I myself lunged into one of the freshly loaded cars, just as it started to draw
away from the curb. In doing it, I hit my head a very audible (perhaps retributive)
crack on the roof. One of the occupants of the car was none other than my whispering
acquaintance, Helen Silsburn, and she started to offer me her unqualified sympathy.
The crack had evidently resounded throughout the car. But at twenty-three I
was the sort of young man who responds to all public injury of his person, short
of a fractured skull, by giving out a hollow, subnormal-sounding laugh.
The car moved west, directly, as it were, into the open furnace of the late-afternoon
sky. It continued west for two blocks, till it reached Madison Avenue, and then
it right-angled sharply north. I felt as though we were all being saved from
being caught up by the sun's terrible flue only by the anonymous driver's enormous
alertness and skill.
The first four or five blocks north on Madison, conversation in the car was
chiefly limited to remarks like 'Am I giving you enough room?' and 'I've never
been so hot in my entire life.' The one who had never been so hot in her entire
life was, as I'd learned from a certain amount of eavesdropping at the curb,
the bride's Matron of Honor. She was a hefty girl of about twenty-four or -five,
in a pink satin dress, with a circlet of artificial forget-me-nots in her hair.
There was a distinctly athletic ethos about her, as if, a year or two earlier,
she might have majored in physical education in college. In her lap she was
holding a bouquet of gardenias rather as though it were a deflated volley-ball.
She was seated in the back of the car, hippressed between her husband and a
tiny elderly man in a top hat and cutaway, who was holding an unlighted clear-Havana
cigar. Mrs Silsburn and I - our respective inside knees unribaldly touching-occupied
the jump seats. Twice, without any excuse whatever, out of sheer approval, I
glanced around at the tiny elderly man. When I'd originally loaded the car and
held the door open for him, I'd had a passing impulse to pick him up bodily
and insert him gently through the open window. He was tininess itself, surely
being not more than four nine or ten and without being either a midget or a
dwarf. In the car, he sat staring very severely straight ahead of him. On my
second look around at him, I noticed that he had what very much appeared to
be an old gravy stain on the lapel of his cutaway. I also noticed that his silk
hat cleared the roof of the car by a good four or five inches.... But for the
most part, those first few minutes in the car, I was still mainly concerned
with my own state of health. Besides having pleurisy and a bruised head, I had
a hypochondriac's notion that I was getting a strep throat. I sat surreptitiously
curling back my tongue and exploring the suspected ailing part. I was staring,
as I remember, directly in front of me, at the back of the driver's neck, which
was a relief map of boil scars, when suddenly my jump-scat mate addressed me:
'I didn't get a chance to ask you inside. How's that darling mother of yours?
Aren't you Dickie Briganza?'
My tongue, at the time of the question, was curled back exploratively as far
as the soft palate. I disentangled it, swallowed, and turned to her. She was
fifty, or thereabouts, fashionably and tastefully dressed. She was wearing a
very heavy pancake makeup. I answered no - that I wasn't.
She narrowed her eyes a trifle at me and said I looked exactly like Celia Briganza's
boy. Around the mouth. I tried to show by my expression that it was a mistake
anybody could make. Then I went on staring at the back of the driver's neck.
The car was silent. I glanced out of the window, for a change of scene.
'How do you like the Army?' Mrs Silsburn asked. Abruptly, conversationally.
I had a brief coughing spell at that particular instant. When it was over, I
turned to her with all available alacrity and said I'd made a lot of buddies.
It was a little difficult for me to swivel in her direction, what with the encasement
of adhesive tape around my diaphragm.
She nodded. ' I think you're all just wonderful,' she said, somewhat ambiguously.
'Are you a friend of the bride's or the groom's?' she then asked, delicately
getting down to brass tacks.
'Well, actually, I'm not exactly a friend of -'
'You'd better not say you're a friend of the groom,' the Matron of Honor interrupted
me, from the back of the car. 'I'd like to get my hands on him for about two
minutes. Just two minutes, that's all.'
Mrs Silsburn turned briefly - but completely - around to smile at the speaker.
Then she faced front again. We made the round trip, inn fact, almost in unison.
Considering that Mrs Silsburn had turned around for only an instant, the smile
she had bestowed on the Matron of Honor was a kind of jump-scat masterpiece.
It was vivid enough to express unlimited partisanship with all young people,
all over the world, but most particularly with this spirited, outspoken local
representative, to whom, perhaps, she had been little more than perfunctorily
introduced, if at all.
'Bloodthirsty wench,' said a chuckling male voice. And Mrs Silsburn and I turned
around again. It was the Matron of Honor's husband who had spoken up. He was
seated directly behind me, at his wife's left. He and I briefly exchanged that
blank, uncomradely look which, possibly, in the crapulous year of 1942, only
an officer and a private could exchange. A first lieutenant in the Signal Corps,
he was wearing a very interesting Air Corps pilot's cap - a visored hat with
the metal frame removed from inside the crown, which usually conferred on the
wearer a certain, presumably desired, intrepid look. In his case, however, the
cap didn't begin to fill the bill. It seemed to serve no other purpose than
to make my own outsize, regulation headpiece feel rather like a clown's hat
that someone had nervously picked out of the incinerator. His face was sallow
and, essentially, daunted-looking. He was perspiring with an almost incredible
profusion - on his forehead, on his upper lip, and even at the end of his nose
-to the point where a salt tablet might have been in order. 'I'm married to
the bloodthirstiest wench in six counties,' he said, addressing Mrs Silsburn
and giving another soft, public chuckle. In automatic deference to his rank,
I very nearly chuckled right along with him - a short, inane, stranger's and
draftee's chuckle that would clearly signify that I was with him and everyone
else in the car, against no one.
'I mean it,' the Matron of Honor said. 'Just two minutes - that's all, brother.
Oh, if I could just get my two little hands -'
'All right, now, take it easy, take it easy,' her husband said, still with apparently
inexhaustible resources of connubial good humor. 'Just take it easy. You'll
last longer.'
Mrs Silsburn faced around toward the back of the car again, and favored the
Matron of Honor with an all but canonized smile. 'Did anyone see any of his
people at the wedding?' she inquired softly, with just a little emphasis - no
more than perfectly genteel - on the personal pronoun.
The Matron of Honor's answer came with toxic volume: 'No. They're all out on
the West Coast or someplace. I just wish I had.'
Her husband's chuckle sounded again. 'What wouldja done if you had, honey?'
he asked - and winked indiscriminately at me.
'Well, I don't know, but I'd've done something,' said the Matron of Honor. The
chuckle at her left expanded in volume. 'Well, I would have!' she insisted.
' I'd've said something to them. My gosh.' She spoke with increasing aplomb,
as though perceiving that, cued by her husband, the rest of us within earshot
were finding something attractively forthright - spunky - about her sense of
justice, however youthful or impractical it might be. ' I don't know what I'd
have said to them. I probably would have just blabbered something idiotic. But
my gosh. Honestly! I just can't stand to see somebody get away with absolute
murder. It makes my blood boil.' She suspended animation just long enough to
be bolstered by a look of simulated empathy from Mrs Silsburn. Mrs Silsburn
and I were now turned completely, supersociably, around in our jump seats. 'I
mean it,' the Matron of Honor said. 'You can't just barge through life hurting
people's feelings whenever you feel like it.'
'I'm afraid I know very little about the young man,' Mrs Silsburn said, softly.
'As a matter of fact, I haven't even met him. The first I'd heard that Muriel
was even engaged -'
'Nobody's met him,' the Matron of Honor said, rather explosively. 'I haven't
even met him. We had two rehearsals, and both times Muriel's poor father had
to take his place, just because his crazy plane couldn't take off. He was supposed
to get a hop here last Tuesday night in some crazy Army plane, but it was snowing
or something crazy in Colorado, or Arizona, or one of those crazy places, and
he didn't get in till one o'clock in the morning, last night. Then - at that
insane hour - he calls Muriel on the phone from way out in Long Island or someplace
and asks her to meet him in the lobby of some horrible hotel so they can talk.'
The Matron of Honor shuddered eloquently. 'And you know Muriel. She's just darling
enough to let anybody and his brother push her around. That's what gripes me.
It's always those kind of people that get hurt in the end.... Anyway, so she
gets dressed and gets in a cab and sits in some horrible lobby talking with
him till quarter to five in the morning.' The Matron of Honor released her grip
on her gardenia bouquet long enough to raise two clenched fists above her lap.
'Ooo, it makes me so mad!' she said.
'What hotel?' I asked the Matron of Honor.' Do you know?
I tried to make my voice sound casual, as though, possibly, my father might
be in the hotel business and I took a certain understandable filial interest
in where people stopped in New York. In reality, my question meant almost nothing.
I was just thinking aloud, more or less. I'd been interested in the fact that
my brother had asked his fiancée to meet him in a hotel lobby, rather
than at his empty, available apartment. The morality of the invitation was by
no means out of character, but it interested me, mildly, nonetheless.
'I don't know which hotel,' the Matron of Honor said irritably. 'Just some hotel.'
She stared at me. 'Why?' she demanded. 'Are you a friend of his?'
There was something distinctly intimidating about her stare. It seemed to come
from a one-woman mob, separated only by time and chance from her knitting bag
and a splendid view of the guillotine. I've been terrified of mobs, off any
kind, all my life. 'We were boys together,' I answered, all but unintelligibly.
'Well, lucky you!'
'Now, now,' said her husband.
'Well, I'm sorry,' the Matron of Honor said to him, but addressing all of us.
'But you haven't been in a room watching that poor kid cry her eyes out for
a solid hour. It's not funny - and don't you forget it. I've heard about grooms
getting cold feet, and all that. But you don't do it at the last minute. I mean
you don't do it so that you'll embarrass a lot of perfectly nice people half
to death and almost break a kid's spirit and everything ! If he'd changed his
mind, why didn't he write to her and at least break it off like a gentleman,
for goodness' sake? Before all the damage was done.'
'All right, take it easy, just take it easy,' her husband said. His chuckle
was still there, but it was sounding a trifle strained.
'Well, I mean it ! Why couldn't he write to her and just tell her, like a man,
and prevent all this tragedy and everything?'
She looked at me, abruptly. 'Do you have any idea where he is, by any chance?'
she demanded, with metal in her voice. 'If you were boyhood friends, you should
have some -'
'I just got into New York about two hours ago,' I said nervously. Not only the
Matron of Honor but her husband and Mrs Silsburn as well were now staring at
me. 'So far, I haven't even had a chance to get to a phone.' At that point,
as I remember, I had a coughing spell. It was genuine enough, but I must say
I did very little to suppress it or shorten its duration.
'You had that cough looked at, soldier?' the Lieutenant asked me when I'd come
out of it.
At that instant, I had another coughing spell - a perfectly genuine one, oddly
enough. I was still turned a sort of half or quarter right in my jump seat,
with my body averted just enough toward the front of the car to be able to cough
with all due hygienic propriety.
It
seems very disorderly, but I think a paragraph ought to be wedged in right here
to answer a couple of stumpers. First off, why did I go on sitting in the car?
Aside from all incidental considerations, the car was reportedly destined to
deliver its occupants to the bride's parents' apartment house. No amount of
information, first- or secondhand, that I might have acquired from the prostrate,
unmarried bride or from her disturbed (and, very likely, angry) parents could
possibly have made up for the awkwardness of my presence in their apartment.
Why, then, did I go on sitting in the car? Why didn't I get out while, say,
we were stopped for a red light? And, still more salient, why had I jumped into
the car in the first place? . . . There seem to me at least a dozen answers
to these questions, and all of them, however dimly, valid enough. I think, though,
that I can dispense with them, and just reiterate that the year was 1942, that
I was twenty-three, newly drafted, newly advised in the efficacy of keeping
close to the herd - and, above all, I felt lonely. One simply jumped into loaded
cars, as I see it, and stayed seated in them.
To get back to the plot, I remember that while all three - the Matron of Honor,
her husband, and Mrs Silsbum - were conjunctively staring at me and watching
me cough, I glanced over at the tiny elderly man in the back. He was still staring
fixedly straight ahead of him. I noticed, almost with gratitude, that his feet
didn't quite touch the floor. They looked like old and valued friends of mine.
'What's this man supposed to do, anyway? 'the Matron of Honor said to me when
I'd emerged from my second coughing spell.
'You mean Seymour?' I said. It seemed clear, at first, from her inflection,
that she had something singularly ignominious in mind. Then, suddenly, it struck
me - and it was sheerly intuitive - that she might well be in secret possession
of a motley number of biographical facts about Seymour; that is, the low, regrettably
dramatic, and (in my opinion) basically misleading facts about him. That he'd
been Billy Black, a national radio 'celebrity', for some six years of his boyhood.
Or that, for another example, he'd been a freshman at Columbia when he'd just
turned fifteen.
'Yes, Seymour,' said the Matron of Honor. 'What'd he do before he was in the
Army?'
Again I had the same little effulgent flash of intuition that she knew much
more about him than, for some reason, she meant to indicate. It seemed, for
one thing, that she knew perfectly well that Seymour had been teaching English
before his induction - that he'd been a professor. A professor. For an instant,
in fact, as I looked at her, I had a very uncomfortable notion that she might
even know that I was Seymour's brother. It wasn't a thought to dwell on. Instead,
I looked her unsquarely in the eye and said, 'He was a chiropodist.' Then, abruptly,
I faced around and looked out of my window. The car had been motionless for
some minutes, and I had just become aware of the sound of martial drums in the
distance, from the general direction of Lexington or Third Avenue.
'It's
a parade !' said Mrs Silsburn. She had faced around, too.
We were in the tipper Eighties. A policeman was stationed in the middle of Madison
Avenue and was halting all north- and south-bound traffic. So far as I could
tell, he was just halting it; that is, not redirecting it either east or west.
There were three or four cars and a bus waiting to move southward, but our car
chanced to be the only vehicle aimed uptown. At the immediate corner, and at
what I could see of the uptown side. street leading toward Fifth Avenue, people
were standing two and three deep along the curb and on the walk, waiting, apparently,
for a detail of troops, or nurses, or Boy Scouts, or what-have-you, to leave
their assembly point at Lexington or Third Avenue and march past.
'Oh, Lord. Wouldn't you just know?' said the Matron of Honor.
I turned around and very nearly bumped heads with her. She was leaning forward,
toward and all but into the space between Mrs Silsburn and me. Mrs Silsburn
turned toward her, too, with a responsive, rather pained expression.
'We may be here for weeks,' the Matron of Honor said, craning forward to see
out of the driver's windshield. 'I should be there now. I told Muriel and her
mother I'd be in one of the first cars and that I'd get up to the house in about
five minutes. Oh, God! Can't we do something?'
' I should be there, too,' Mrs Silsburn said, rather promptly.
'Yes, but I solemnly promised her. The apartment's gonna be loaded with all
kinds of crazy aunts and uncles and absolute strangers, and I told her I'd stand
guard with about ten bayonets and see that she got a little privacy and -' She
broke off. 'Oh, God. This is awful.'
Mrs Silsburn gave a small, stilted laugh. 'I'm afraid I'm one of the crazy aunts,'
she said. Clearly, she was affronted.
The Matron of Honor looked at her. 'Oh - I'm sorry. I didn't mean you,' she
said. She sat back in her seat. ' I just meant that their apartment's so tiny,
and if everybody starts pouring in by the dozens - You know what I mean.'
Mrs Silsburn said nothing, and I didn't look at her to sec just how seriously
she'd been affronted by the Matron of Honor's remark. I remember, though, that
I was impressed, in a peculiar sense, with the Matron of Honor's tone of apology
for her little slip about 'crazy aunts and uncles'. It had been a genuine apology,
but not an embarrassed and, still better, not an obsequious one, and for a moment
I had a feeling that, for all her stagy indignation and showy grit, there was
something bayonetlike about her, something not altogether unadmirable. (I'll
grant, quickly and readily, that my opinion in this instance has a very limited
value. I often feel a rather excessive pull toward people who don't overapologize.)
The point is, however, that right then, for the first time, a small wave of
prejudice against the missing groom passed over me, a just perceptible little
whitecap of censure for his unexplained absenteeism.
'Let's see if we can get a little action around here,' the Matron of Honor's
husband said. It was rather the voice of a man who keeps calms under fire. I
felt him deploying behind me, and then, abruptly, his head craned into the limited
space between Mrs Silsburn and me. 'Driver,' he said peremptorily, and waited
for a response. When it came with promptness, his voice became a bit more tractile,
democratic: 'How long do you think we'll be tied tip here?'
The driver turned round. 'You got me, Mac,' he said. He faced front again. He
was absorbed in what was going on at the intersection. A minute earlier, a small
boy with a partly deflated red balloon had run out into the cleared, forbidden
street. He had just been captured and was being dragged back to the curb by
his father, who gave the boy two only partly openhanded punches between the
shoulder blades. The act was righteously booed by the crowd.
'Did you see what that man did to that child?' Mrs Silsburn demanded of everyone
in general. No one answered her.
'What about asking that cop how long we're apt to be held up here?' the Matron
of Honor's husband said to the driver. He was still leaning forward. He'd evidently
not been altogether satisfied with the laconic reply to his first question.
'We're all in something of a hurry, you know. Do you thick you could ask him
how long we're apt to be tied tip here?'
Without turning around, the driver rudely shrugged his shoulders. But he turned
off his ignition, and got out of the car, slamming the heavy limousine door
behind him. He was an untidy, bullish-looking man in partial chauffeur's livery
- a black serge suit, but no cap.
He walked slowly and very independently, not to say insolently, the few steps
over to the intersection, where the ranking policeman was directing things.
The two then stood talking to each other for an endless amount of time. (I heard
the Matron of Honor give a groan, behind me.) Then, suddenly, the two men broke
into uproarious laughter - as though they hadn't really been conversing at all
but had been exchanging very short dirty jokes. Then our driver, still laughing
uninfectiously, waved a fraternal hand at the cop and walked - slowly - back
to the car. He got in, slammed his door shut, extracted a cigarette from a package
on the ledge over the dashboard, tucked the cigarette behind his car, and then,
and then only, turned around to make his report to us. 'He don't know,' he said.
'We gotta wait for the parade to pass by here.' He gave us, collectively, an
indifferent once-over. 'After that we call go ahead O.K.' He faced front, disengaged
the cigarette from behind his ear, and lit it.
In the back of the car, the Matron of Honor sounded a voluminous little plaint
of frustration and pique. And then there was silence. For the first time in
several minutes, I glanced around at tile tiny elderly man with the unlighted
cigar. The delay didn't seem to affect him. His standard of comportment for
sitting in the rear scat of cars - cars in motion, cars stationary, and even,
one couldn't help imagining, cars that were driven off bridges into rivers -
seemed to be fixed. It was wonderfully simple. You just sat very erect, maintaining
a clearance of four or five inches between your top hat and the roof, and you
stared ferociously ahead at the windshield. If Death - who was out there all
the time, possibly sitting on the hood - if Death stepped miraculously through
the glass and came in after you, in all probability you just got up and went
along with him, ferociously but quietly. Chances were, you could take your cigar
with you, if it was a clear Havana.
'What are we going to do? Just sit here?' the Matron of Honor said. Tin so hot
I could die.' And Mrs Silsburn and I turned round just in time to see her look
at her husband directly for the first time since they'd got into the car. 'Can't
you move over just a tiny little bit?' she said to him. 'I'm so squashed in
here I can hardly breathe.'
The Lieutenant, chuckling, opened his hands expressively. Tin practically sitting
on the fender now, Bunny,' he said.
The Matron of Honor then looked over, with mixed curiosity and disapproval,
at her other seatmate, who, as though unconsciously dedicated to cheering me
tip, was occupying far more space than he needed. There was a good two inches
between his right hip and the base of the outside armrest. The Matron of Honor
undoubtedly noticed it, too, but, for all her metal, she didn't quite have what
it would have taken to speak up to that formidable-looking little personage.
She turned back to her husband. 'Can you reach your cigarettes?' she said irritably.
'I'll never get mine out, the way we're packed in here.' With the words 'packed
in', she turned her head again to shoot a brief, all-implicit look at the tiny
guilty party who had usurped the space she thought ought rightfully to be hers.
He remained sublimely out of touch. He went on glaring straight ahead of him,
towards the driver's windshield. The Matron of Honor looked at Mrs Silsburn,
and raised her eyebrows expressively. Mrs Silsburn responded with a countenance
full of ' understanding and sympathy. The Lieutenant, meanwhile, had shifted
his weight over to his left, or window-side, buttock, and from the right-hand
pocket of his officer's pinks had taken out a package of cigarettes and a folder
of matches. His wife picked out a cigarette, and waited for a light, which was
immediately forthcoming. Mrs Silsburn and I watched the lighting of the cigarette
as though it were a moderately bewitching novelty.
'Oh, pardon me,' the Lieutenant suddenly said, and extended his cigarette pack
to Mrs Silsburn.
'No, thank you. I don't smoke,' Mrs Silsburn said quickly - almost with regret.
'Soldier?' the Lieutenant said, extending the pack to me, after the most imperceptible
of hesitations. In all truth, I rather liked him for putting through the offer,
for the small victory of common courtesy over caste, but I declined the cigarette.
'May I see your matches?' Mrs Silsburn said, in an exceedingly diffident, almost
little-girlish voice.
'These?' said the Lieutenant. He handed his folder of matches readily over to
Mrs Silsburn.
While I looked on with an expression of absorption, Mrs Silsburn examined the
match folder. On its outside cover, in gold letters on a crimson background,
were printed the words 'These Matches Were Stolen from Bob and Edie Burwick's
House.' 'Darling,' Mrs Silsburn said, shaking her head. 'Really darling.' I
tried to show by my expression thatl perhaps couldn't read the inscription without
eyeglasses; I squinted, neutrally. Mrs Silsburn seemed reluctant to hand the
folder back to its owner. When she had, and the Lieutenant had replaced the
folder in the breast pocket of his tunic, she said, '1 don't think I've ever
seen that before.' Turned almost completely around, now, in her jump seat, she
sat gazing rather fondly at the Lieutenant's breast pocket.
'We had a whole bunch of them made up last year,' the Lieutenant said. 'Be amazed,
actually, how it keeps you from running out of matches.'
The Matron of Honor turned to him - or, rather, on him. 'We didn't do it for
that,' she said. She gave Mrs Silsburn a you-know-how-men-are look, and said
to her, 'I don't know. I just thought it was cute. Corny, but sort of cute..
You know.'
'It's darling. I don't think I've ever -'
'Actually, it isn't original or anything like that. Everybody's got them now,'
the Matron of Honor said. 'Where I got the idea originally, as a matter of fact,
was from Muriel's mother and dad. They always had them around the house.' She
inhaled deeply on her cigarette, and as she went on talking she released the
smoke in little syllabic drafts. 'Golly, they're terrific people. That's what
kills me about this whole business. I mean why doesn't something like this happen
to all the stinkers in the world, instead of the nice ones? That's what I can't
understand.' She looked to Mrs Silsburn for an answer.
Mrs Silsburn smiled a smile that was at once wordly, wan, and enigmatic - the
smile, as I remember, of a sort of jumpseat Mona Lisa. 'I've often wondered,'
she mused softly. She then mentioned, rather ambiguously, ' Muriel's mother
is my late husband's baby sister, you know.'
'Oh!' the Matron of Honor said with interest. 'Well, then, yogi know.' She reached
out an extraordinarily long left arm, and flicked her cigarette ashes into the
ashtray near her husband's window. 'I honestly think she's one of the few really
brilliant people I've met in my entire life. I mean she's readjust about everything
that's ever been printed. My gosh, if I'd read just about one-tenth of what
that woman's read and forgotten, I'd be happy. I mean she's taught, she's worked
on a newspaper, she designs her own clothes, she does every single bit of her
own housework. Her cooking's out of this world. Golly ! I honestly think she's
the most wonder -'
'Did she approve of the marriage?' Mrs Silsburn interrupted. 'I mean the reason
I ask, I've been in Detroit for weeks and weeks. My sister-in-law suddenly passed
away, and I've -'
'She's too nice to say,' the Matron of Honor said flatly. She w shook her head.
' I mean she's too - you know - discreet and all.' She reflected. 'As a matter
of fact, this morning's about the only time I ever heard her say boo on the
subject, really. And then it was only just because she was so upset about poor
Muriel.' She reached out an arm and tipped her cigarette ashes again.
'What'd she say this morning?' Mrs Silsburn asked avidly.
The Matron of Honor seemed to reflect for a moment. 'Well, nothing very much,
really,' she said. 'I mean nothing small or really derogatory or anything like
that. All she said, really, was that this Seymour, in her opinion, was a latent
homosexual and that he was basically afraid of marriage. I mean she didn't say
it nasty or anything. She just said it - you know - intelligently. I mean she
was psychoanalyzed herself for years and years.' The Matron of Honor looked
at Mrs Silsburn. 'That's no secret or anything. I mean Mrs Fedder'll tell you
that herself, so I'm not giving away any secret or anything.'
'I know that,' Mrs Silsburn said quickly. 'She's the last person in the -'
' I mean the point is,' the Matron of Honor said, ' she isn't the kind of person
that comes right out and says something like that unless she knows what she's
talking about. And she never, never would've said it in the first place if poor
Muriel hadn't been so - you know - so prostrate and everything.' She shook her
head grimly. 'Golly, you should've seen that poor kid.'
I should, no doubt, break in here to describe my general reaction to the main
import of what the Matron of Honor was saying. I'd just as soon let it go, though,
for the moment, if the reader will bear with me.
'What else did she say?' Mrs Silsburn asked. 'Rhea, I mean. Did she say anything
else?' I didn't look at her - I couldn't take my eyes off the Matron of Honor's
face - but I had a passing, wild impression that Mrs Silsburn was all but sitting
in the main speaker's lap.
'No. Not really. Hardly anything.' The Matron of Honor, reflecting, shook her
head. 'I mean, as I say, she wouldn't have said anything - with people standing
around and all - if poor Muriel hadn't been so crazy upset.' She flicked her
cigarette ashes again. 'About the only other thing she said was that this Seymour
was a really schizoid personality and that, if you really looked at it the right
way, it was really better for Muriel that things turned out the way they did.
Which makes sense to we, but I'm not so sure it does to Muriel. He's got her
so buffaloed that she doesn't know whether she's coning or going. That's what
makes me so - '
She was interrupted at that point. By me. As I remember, my voice was unsteady,
as it invariably is when I'm vastly upset.
'What brought Mrs Fodder to the conclusion that Seymour is a latent homosexual
and a schizoid personality?'
All eyes - all searchlights, it seemed - the Matron of Honor's, Mrs Silsburn's,
even the Lieutenant's, were abruptly trained on me. 'What?' the Matron of Honor
said to me, sharply, faintly hostilely. And again I had a passing, abrasive
notion that she knew I was Seymour's brother.
'What makes Mrs Fodder think that Seymour's a latent homosexual and schizoid
personality?'
The Matron of Honor stared at me, then gave an eloquent snort. She turned and
appealed to Mrs Silsburn with a maximum of irony. 'Would you say that somebody's
normal that pulled a stunt like the one today?' She raised her eyebrows, and
waited. 'Would you?' she asked quietly-quietly. 'Be honest. I'm just asking.
For this gentleman's benefit.'
I had a sudden, violent impulse to jump out of the car and break into a sprint,
in any direction at all. As I remember, though, I was still in my jump seat
when the Matron of Honor addressed me again. Look,' she said, in the spuriously
patient tone of voice that a teacher might take with a child who is not only
retarded but whose nose is forever running unattractively. 'I don't know how
much you know about people. But what man in his right mind, the night before
he's supposed to get married, keeps his fiancée up all night blabbing
to her all about how he's too nappy to get married and that she'll have to post
pone the wedding till he feels steadier or he won't be able to come to it? Then,
when his fiancée explains to him like a child that everything's been
arranged and planned out for months, and that her father's gone to incredible
expense and trouble and all to have a reception and everything like that, and
that her relatives and friends are coming from all over the country - then,
after she explains all that, he says to her he's terribly sorry but he can't
get married till he feels less happy or some crazy thing! Use your head, now,
if you don't mind. Does that sound like somebody normal? Does that sound like
somebody m their right mind?' Her voice was now shrill. 'Or does that sound
like. somebody that should be stuck in some booby hatch?' She looked at me very
severely, and when I didn't immediately speak up in either defense or surrender,
she sat heavily back in her seat, and said to her husband, 'Give me another
cigarette, please. This thing's gonna burn me.' She handed him her burning stub,
and he extinguished it for her. He then took out his cigarette package again.
'You light it,' she said. 'I haven't got the energy.'
Mrs Silsburn cleared her throat. 'It sounds to me,' she said, 'like a blessing
in disguise that everything's turned -'
Mrs Silsburn's answer was gentleness itself, fairness itself. No, I certainly
would not,' she said.
'I ask you,' the Matron of Honor said to her with a fresh impetus at the same
time accepting a freshly lighted cigarette from her husband. 'Does that sound
like a normal person - a normal man - to you? Or does it sound like somebody
that's either never grown up or is just an absolute raving maniac of some crazy
kind?'
'Goodness. I don't know what to say, really. It just sounds to me like a blessing
in disguise that every -'
The Matron of Honor sat forward suddenly, alertly, exhaling smoke through her
nostrils. 'All right, never mind that, drop f that for a minute - I don't need
that,' she said. She was addressing Mrs Silsburn, but in actuality she was addressing
me through Mrs Silsburn's face, so to speak. 'Did you ever see - - in the movies?'
she demanded.
The name she mentioned was the professional name of a then fairly well-known-and
now, in 1955, a quite famous - actress singer.
'Yes,' said Mrs Silsburn quickly and interestedly, and waited.
The Matron of Honor nodded. 'All right,' she said. 'Did you ever notice, by
any chance, how she smiles sort of crooked? Only on one side of her face, sort
of? It's very noticeable if you -
'Yes - yes, I have !' Mrs Silsburn said.
The Matron of Honor dragged on her cigarette, and glanced over - just perceptibly
- at me. 'Well, that happens to be a partial paralysis of some kind,' she said,
exhaling a little gust of smoke with each word. 'And do you know how she got
it? This normal Seymour person apparently hit her and she had nine stitches
taken in her face.' She reached over (in lieu, possibly, of a better stage direction)
and flicked her ashes again.
May I ask where you heard that? I said. My lips were quivering slightly, like
two fools.
'You may,' she said, looking at Mrs Silsburn instead of me. 'Muriel's mother
happened to mention it about two hours ago, while Muriel was sobbing her eyes
out.' She looked at me. 'Does that answer your question??' She suddenly shifted
her bouquet of gardenias from her right to her left hand it was the nearest
thing to a fairly commonplace nervous gesture that I'd seen her make. 'Just
for your information, incidentally,' she said, looking at me, 'do you know who
I think you arc? I think you're this Seymour's brother.' She waited, very briefly,
and, when I didn't say anything: 'You look like him, from his crazy picture,
and I happen to know that he was supposed to come to the wedding. His sister
or somebody told Muriel.' Her look was fixed unwaveringly on my face. 'Are you?'
she asked bluntly.
My voice must have sounded a trifle rented when I answered. 'Yes,' I said. My
face was burning. In a way, though, I felt an infinitely less furry sense of
self-identification than I had since I'd got off the train earlier in the afternoon.
'I knew you were,' the Matron of Honor said. 'I'm not stupid, you know. I knew
who you were the minute you got in this car.' She turned to her husband. 'Didn't
I say lie was his brother the minute he got in this car? Didn't I?'
The Lieutenant altered his sitting position a trifle. ' Well, you said he probably
- yes, you did,' he said. 'You did. Yes.'
One didn't have to look over at Mrs Silsburn to perceive how attentively she
had taken in this latest development. I glanced past and behind her, furtively,
at the fifth passenger - the tiny elderly man - to see if his insularity was
still intact. It was. No one's indifference has ever been such a comfort to
me. L
The Matron of Honor came back to me. 'For your information, I also know that
your brother's no chiropodist. So don't; be so funny. I happen to know he was
Billy Black on "It's a' Wise Child" for about fifty years or something.'
Mrs Silsburn abruptly took a more active part in the conversation. 'The radio
program?' she inquired, and I felt her looking at me with a fresh, keener, interest.
The Matron of Honor didn't answer her. 'Which one were you?' she said to me.
'Georgie Black?' The mixture of rudeness and curiosity in her voice was interesting,
if not quite disarming.
'Georgie Black was nay brother Walt,' I said, answering only her second question.
She turned to Mrs Silsburn. 'It's supposed to be some kind of a secret or something,
but this man and his brother Seymour were on this radio program under fake names
or something. The Black children.'
'Take it easy, honey, take it easy,' the Lieutenant suggested, rather nervously.
His wife turned to him. 'I will snot take it easy,' she said - and again, contrary
to my every conscious inclination, I felt a little pinch of something close
to admiration for her metal, solid brass or no. 'His brother's supposed to be
so intelligent, for heaven's sake,' she said. 'In college when he was fourteen
or something, and all like that. If what he did to that kid today is intelligent,
then I'm Mahatma Gandhi ! I don't care. It just makes me sick!'
Just then, I felt a minute extra added discomfort. Someone was very closely
examining the left, or weaker, side of my face. It was Mrs Silsburn. She started
a bit as I turned abruptly toward her. 'May I ask if you were Buddy Black?'
she said, and a certain deferential note in her voice rather made me think for
a fractional moment, that she was about to present me with a fountain pen and
a small, morocco-bound autograph album. The passing thought made me distinctly
uneasy - considering, if nothing else, the fact that it was I942 and some nine
or ten years past my commercial bloom. 'The reason I ask,' she said, 'my husband
used to listen to that program without fail every single -'
'If you're interested,' the Matron of Honor interrupted her, looking at me,
'that was the one program on the air I always absolutely loathed. I loathe precocious
children. if I ever had a child that -'
The end of her sentence was lost to us. She was interrupted, suddenly and unequivocally,
by the most piercing, most deafening, most impure E-flat blast I've ever heard.
All of us in the car, I'm sure, literally jumped. At that moment, a drumand-bugle
corps, composed of what seemed to be a hundred or more tone-deaf Sea Scouts
was passing. With what seemed to be almost delinquent abandon, the boys had
just rammed into the sides of 'The Stars and Stripes Forever'. Mrs Silsburn,
very sensibly, clapped her hands over her ears.
For an eternity of seconds, it seemed, the din was all but incredible. Only
the Matron of Honor's voice could have risen above it - or, for that matter,
would have attempted to. When it did, one might have thought she was addressing
us, obviously at the top of her voice, from some great distance away, somewhere,
possibly, in the vicinity of the bleachers of Yankee Stadium.
'I can't take this!' she said. 'Let's get out of here and find some place to
plume from. I've got to phone Muriel and say we're delayed ! She'll be crazy
!'
With the advent of the local Armageddon, Mrs Silsburn and I had faced front
to see it in. We now turned around again in our jump seats to face the Leader,
And, possibly, our deliverer.
'There's a Schrafft's on Seventy-ninth Street!' she bellowed at Mrs Silsburn.
'Let's go have a soda, and l can phone from there! It'll at least be air-conditioned
!'
Mrs Silsburn nodded enthusiastically, and pantomimed 'Yes !' with her month.
You come, too!' the Matron of Honor shouted at me.
With very peculiar spontaneity, I remember, I shouted back to her the altogether
extravagant word 'Fine!' (It isn't easy, to this day, to account for the Matron
of Honor's having in cluded me in her invitation to quit the ship. It may simply
have been inspired by a born leader's natural sense of orderliness. She may
have had some sort of remote but compulsive urge to make her landing party complete....
My singularly immediate acceptance of the invitation strikes me as much more
easily explainable. I prefer to think it was a basically religious impulse.
In certain Zen monasteries, it's a cardinal rule, if not the only serious enforced
discipline, that when one monk calls out 'Hi!' to another monk, the latter must
call back 'Hi!' without thinking.)
The Matron of Honor then turned and, for the first time, directly addressed
the tiny elderly man beside her. To my undying gratification, he was still glaring
straight ahead of hint, as though his own private scenery hadn't changed an
iota. His unlighted clear-Havana cigar was still clenched between two fingers.
What with his apparent unmindfulness of the terrible din the passing drum-and-bugle
corps was making, and, possibly, from a grins tenet that all old men over eighty
must be either stone-deaf or very hard of hearing, the Matron of Honor brought
her lips to within an inch or two of his left ear. 'We're going to get out of
the car!' she shouted at him - almost into him. 'We're going to find a place
to phone .from, and maybe have some refreshment ! Do you want to conic with
us?'
The elderly man's immediate reaction was just short of glorious. He looked first
at the Matron of Honor, then at the rest of us, and then grinned. It was a grin
that was no less resplendent for the fact that it made no sense whatever. Nor
for the fact that his teeth were obviously, beautifully, transcendently false.
He looked at the Matron of Honor inquisitively for just an instant, his grin
wonderfully intact. Or, rather, he looked to her - as if, I thought, he believed
the Matron of Honor, or one of us, had lovely plans to pass a picnic his way.
'I don't think he heard you, honey !' the Lieutenant shouted.
The Matron of Honor nodded, and once again brought the megaphone of her mouth
up close to the old man's car. With really praiseworthy volume, she repeated
her invitation to the old man to join us in quitting the car. Once again, at
face value, the old man seemed more than amenable to any suggestion in the world
- possibly not short of trotting over and having a dip in the East River. But
again, too, one had an uneasy conviction that he hadn't heard a word that was
said to hint. Abruptly, he proved that this was true. With an enormous grin
at all of us collectively, lie raised his cigar hand and, with one finger, significantly
tapped first his mouth, then his car. The gesture, as lie made it, seemed related
to a perfectly firstclass joke of some kind that he fully meant to share with
all of us.
At that moment, Mrs Silsburn, beside me, gave a visible little sign - almost
a jump - of comprehension. She touched the Matron of Honor's pink satin arm,
and shouted, ' I know who he is! He's deaf and dumb - he's a deaf-mute! He's
Muriel's father's uncle!'
The Matron of Honor's lips formed the word 'Oh!' She swung around in her seat,
toward her husband. 'You got a pencil and paper?' she bellowed to him.
I touched her arm and shouted that I had. Hastily - almost in fact, for some
reason, as though time were about to run out on all of us - I took out of my
inside tunic pocket a small pad and a pencil stub that I'd recently acquisitioned
from a desk drawer of my company Orderly Room at Fort Benning.
Somewhat overly legibly, I wrote on a sheet of paper, 'We're held up indefinitely
by the parade. We're going to find a phone and have a cold drink somewhere.
Will you join us?' I folded the paper once, then handed it to the Matron of
Honor, who opened it, read it, and then handed it to the tiny old man. He read
it, grinning, and then looked at me and wagged his head up and down several
times vehemently. I thought for an instant that this was the full and perfectly
eloquent extent of his reply, but he suddenly motioned to me with his hand,
and I gathered that he wanted me to pass him my pad and pencil. I did so - without
looking over at the Matron of Honor, from' whom great waves of impatience were
rising. The old man adjusted the pad and pencil on his lap with the greatest
care, then sat for a moment, pencil poised, in obvious concentration, his grin
diminished only a very trifle. Then the pencil began, very unsteadily, to move.
An 'I' was dotted. And then both pad and pencil were returned personally to
me, with a marvellously cordial extra added wag of the head. He had written,
in letters that had not quite jelled yet, the single word 'Delighted'. The Matron
of Honor, reading over my shoulder, gave a sound faintly like a snort, but I
quickly looked over at the great writer and tried to show by my expression that
all of us in the car knew a poem when we saw one, and were grateful.
One by one, then, from both doors, we all got out of the car - abandoned ship,
as it were, in the middle of Madison Avenue, in a sea of hot, gummy macadam.
The Lieutenant lingered behind a moment to inform the driver of our mutiny.
As I remember very well, the drum-and-bugle corps was still endlessly passing,
and the din hadn't abated a bit.
The Matron of Honor and Mrs Silsburn led the way to Schrafft's. They walked
as a twosome - almost as advance scouts - south on the east side of Madison
Avenue. When he'd finished briefing the driver, the Lieutenant caught up with
them. Or almost up with then. He fell a little behind them, in order to take
out his wallet in privacy and see, apparently, how much money he had with him.
The bride's father's uncle and I brought up the rear. Whether he had intuited
that I was his friend or simply because I was the owner of a pad and pencil,
he had rather more scrambled than gravitated to a walking position beside me.
The very top of his beautiful silk hat didn't quite come up as high as my shoulder.
I set a comparatively slow gait for us, in deference to the length of his legs.
At the end of a block or so, we were quite a good distance behind the others.
I don't think it troubled either of us. Occasionally, I remember, as we walked
along, my friend and I looked up and down, respectively, at each other and exchanged
idiotic expressions of pleasure at sharing one another's company.
When my companion and I reached the revolving door of Schrafft's Seventy-ninth
Street, the Matron of Honor, her husband, and Mrs Silsburn had all been standing
there for some minutes. They were waiting, I thought, as a rather forbiddingly
integrated party of three. They had been talking, but they stopped when our
motley twosome approached. In the car, just a couple of minutes earlier, when
the drum-and-bugle corps blasted by, a common discomfort, almost a common anguish,
had lent our small group a semblance of alliance - of the sort that can be temporarily
conferred on Cook's tourists caught in a very heavy rainstorm at Pompeii. All
too clearly now, as the tiny old man and I reached the revolving door of Schrafft's,
the storm was over. The Matron of Honor and I exchanged expressions of recognition,
not of greeting. 'It's closed for alterations,' she stated coldly, looking at
me. Unofficially bat unmistakably, she was appointing me odd-man-out again,
and at that moment, for no reason worth going into, I felt a sense of isolation
and loneliness more overwhelming than I'd felt all day. Somewhat simultaneously,
it's worth noting, my cough reactivated itself. I pulled my handkerchief out
of my hip pocket. The Matron of Honor turned to Mrs Silsburn and her husband.
'There's a Longchamps around here somewhere,' she said, 'but I don't know where.'
'I don't either,' Mrs Silsburn said. She seemed very close to tears. At both
her forehead and her tipper lip, perspiration had seeped through even her heavy
pancake makeup. A black patent-leather handbag was under her left arm. She held
it as though it were a favorite doll, and she herself an experimentally rouged
and powdered, and a very unhappy, runaway child.
'We're not gonna be able to get a cab for love or money,' the Lieutenant said
pessimistically. He was looking the worse for wear, too. His 'hot pilot's' cap
appeared almost cruelly incongruous on his pale, dripping, deeply unintrepid-looking
face, and I remember having an impulse to whisk it off his head, or at least
to straighten it somewhat, to adjust it into a less cocked position - the same
impulse, in general motive, that one alight feel at a children's party, where
there is invariably one small, exceedingly homely child wearing a paper hat
that crushes down one or both ears.
'Oh, God, what a day!' the Matron of Honor said for all of us. Her circlet of
artificial flowers was somewhat askew, and she was thoroughly damp, but, I thought,
the only thing really destructible about her was her remotest appendage, so
to speak - her gardenia bouquet. She was still holding it, however absent-mindedly,
in her hand. It obviously hadn't stood the gaff. 'What'll we do?' she asked,
rather frantically, for her. ' We can't wall there. They live practically in
Riverdale. Does anybody have any bright ideas?' She looked first at Mrs Silsburn,
then at her husband - and then, in desperation possibly, at me.
'I have an apartment near here,' I said suddenly and nervously. 'It's just down
the block, as a matter of fact.' I have a feeling that I gave out this information
a trifle too loudly. I may even have shouted it, for all I know. 'It belongs
to my brother and me. My sister's using it while we're in the army, but she's
not there now. She's in the Waves, and she's off on some trip.' I looked at
the Matron of Honor - or at some point just over her head. 'You can at least
phone from there, if you like,' 1 said. 'And the apartment's air-conditioned.
We night all cool off for a minute and get our breaths.'
When the first shock of the invitation had passed over, the Matron of Honor,
Mrs Silsburn, and the Lieutenant went into a sort of consultation, of eyes only,
but there was no visible sign that any kind of verdict was forthcoming. The
Matron of Honor was the first to take any kind of action. She'd been looking
- in vain - at the other two for an opinion on the subject. She tuned back to
me and said, 'Did you say you had a phone?'
'Yes. Unless my sister's had it disconnected for some reason, and I can't see
why she would have.'
'How do we know your brother won't be there?' the Matron of Honor said.
It was a small consideration that hadn't entered my overheated head. ' I don't
think he will be,' I said. 'He may be - it's his apartment, too - but I don't
think he will. I really don't.'
The Matron of Honor stared at me, openly, for a moment - and not rally rudely,
for a change, unless children's stares are rude. Then she turned back to her
husband and Mrs Silsburn, and said, 'We might as well. At least we can phone.'
They nodded in agreement. Mrs Silsburn, in fact, went so far as to remember
her code of etiquette covering invitations given in front of Schrafft's. Through
her sun-baked pancake makeup, a semblance of an Emily Post smile peeped out
at me. It was very welcome, as I remember. ' C'mon, then, let's get out of this
sun,' our leader said. 'What'll I do with this?' She didn't wait for an answer.
She stepped over to the curb and unsentimentally disengaged herself from her
wilted gardenia bouquet. '0. K., lead on, Macduff,' she said to me. 'We'll follow
you. And all l have to say is he'd better not be there when we get there, or
I'll kill the bastard.' She looked at Mrs Silsburn. 'Excuse my language - but
I mean it.'
As directed, I took the lead, almost happily. All instant later, a silk hat
materialized in the air beside me, considerably down and at the left, and my
special, only technically unassigned cohort grinned up at me - for a moment,
I rather thought he was going to slip his hand into mine.
My three guests and my one friend remained outside in the hall while I briefly
cased the apartment.
The windows were all closed, the two air-conditioners had been turned to 'Shut',
and the first breath one took was rather like inhaling deeply in someone's ancient
racoon-coat pocket. The only sound in the whole apartment was the somewhat trembling
purr of the aged refrigerator Seymour and I had acquired second-hand. My sister
Boo Boo, in her girlish, naval way, had left it turned on. There were, in fact,
throughout the apartment, any number of little untidy signs that a seafaring
lady had taken over the place. A handsome, small-size, ensign's navy-blue jacket
was flung, lining down, across the couch. A box of Louis Sherry candies - half
empty, and with the unconsumed candies all more or less experimentally squeezed
- was open on the coffee table, in front of the couch. A framed photograph of
a very resolute-looking young man I'd never seen before stood on the desk. And
all the ashtrays in sight were in fall blossom with crumpled facial tissues
and lipsticked cigarette ends. I didn't go into the kitchen, the bedroom, or
the bathroom, except to open the doors and take a quick look to see if Seymour
was standing upright anywhere. For one reason, I felt enervated and lazy. For
another, I was kept pretty busy raising blinds, turning on air-conditioners,
emptying loaded ashtrays. Besides, the other members of the party barged in
on me almost immediately. 'It's hotter in here than it is on the street,' the
Matron of Honor said, by way of greeting, as she strode in.
'I'll be with you in just a minute,' I said. 'I can't seem to get this air-conditioner
to work.' The 'On' button seemed to be stuck, in fact, and I was busily tinkering
with it.
While I worked on the air-conditioner switch - with my hat still on my head,
I remember - the others circulated rather suspiciously around the room. I watched
them out of the corner of one eye. The Lieutenant went over to the desk and
stood
of yours,' the Head said. ' I mean you lead an absolutely freakish life like
that when you're a kid, and so naturally you never learn to grow up. You never
learn to relate to normal people or anything. That's exactly what Mrs Fedder
was saying in that crazy bedroom a couple of hours ago. But exactly. Your brother's
never learned to relate to anybody. All he can do, apparently, is go around
giving people a bunch of stitches in their faces. He's absolutely unfit for
marriage or anything halfway normal, for goodness' sake. As a matter of fact,
that's exactly what Mrs Fedder said.' The Head then turned just enough to glare
over at the Lieutenant. 'Am I right, Bob? Did she or didn't she say that? Tell
the truth.'
The next voice to speak up was not the Lieutenant's but mine. My mouth was dry,
and my groin felt damp. I said I didn't give a good God damn what Mrs Fedder
had to say on the subject of Seymour. Or, for that matter, what any professional
dilettante or amateur bitch had to say. I said that from the time Seymour was
ten years old, every summa-cum-laude Thinker and intellectual men's room attendant
in the country had been having a go at him. I said it might be different if
Seymour had just been some nasty little high-I.Q. showoff. I said he hadn't
ever been an exhibitionist. He went down to the broadcast every Wednesday night
as though he were going to his own funeral. He didn't even talk to you, for
God's sake, the whole way down on the bus or subway. I said that not one God-damn
person, of all the patronizing, fourth-rate critics and column writers, had
ever seen him for what he really was. A poet, for God's sake. And I mean a poet.
If he never wrote a line of poetry, lie could still flash what lie had at you
with the back of his ear if he wanted to.
I stopped right there, thank God. My heart was banging away something terrible,
and, like most hypochondriacs, I had a little passing, intimidating notion that
such speeches were the stuff that heart attacks are made of. To this day, I
have no idea at all how my guests reacted to my outbreak, the polluted little
stream of invective I'd loosed on them. The first real exterior detail that
I was aware of was the universally familiar sound of plumbing. It came from
another part of the apartment. I looked around the room suddenly, between and
through and past the immediate faces of my guests. 'Where's the old man?' I
asked. 'The little old man?' Butter wouldn't have melted in my mouth.
Oddly enough, when an answer came, it came front the Lieutenant, not the Matron
of Honor. 'I believe he's in the bathroom,' he said. The statement was issued
with a special forthrightness, proclaiming the speaker to be one of those who
don't mince everyday hygienic facts.
'Oh,' I said. I looked rather absently around the room again. Whether or not
I deliberately avoided meeting the Matron of Honor's terrible eye, I don't remember,
or don't care to remember. I spotted the bride's father's uncle's silk hat on
the scat of a straight chair, across the room. I had an impulse to say hello,
aloud, to it. 'I'll get some cold drinks,' I said. 'I'll just be a minute.'
'May I use your phone?' the Matron of Honor suddenly said to me as I passed
by the couch. She swung her feet to the floor.
'Yes - yes, of course,' I said. I looked at Mrs Silsburn and the Lieutenant.
'I thought I'd make. some Tom Collinses, if there are any lemons or limes_ Will
that be all right?'
The Lieutenant's answer startled me by its sudden conviviality. 'Bring'em on,'
he said, and rubbed his hands together, like a hearty drinking man.
Mrs Silsburn left off studying the photographs over the desk to advise me, 'If
you're going to make Tom Collinses - please, just a teentsy, teentsy little
bit of gin in mine. Almost none at all, if it isn't too much trouble.' She was
beginning to look a bit recuperated, even it) just the short time since we'd
got off the street. Perhaps, for one reason, because she was standing within
a few feet of the air-conditioner I'd turned on and some cool air was coming
her way. I said I'd look out for her drink, and then left her among the minor
radio 'celebrities' of the early thirties and the late twenties, the many passé
little faces of Seymour's and my boyhood. The Lieutenant seemed well able to
shift for himself in my absence, too; he was already moving, hands joined behind
his back, like a lone connoisseur, towards the bookshelves. The Matron of Honor
followed me out of the room, yawning as she did - a cavernous, audible yawn
that site made no effort to suppress or obstruct from view.
As the Matron of Honor followed me toward the bedroom, where the phone was,
the bride's father's uncle cants toward us from the far end of the hall. His
face was in the ferocious repose that had fooled me during most of the car ride,
but as he cause closer to us in the hall, the mask reversed itself; he pantomimed
to us both the very highest salutations and greetings, and I found myself grinning
and nodding immoderately in return. His sparse white hair looked freshly combed
- almost freshly washed, as though he might have discovered a tiny barbershop
cached away at the other end of the apartment. When he'd passed us, I felt a
compulsion to look back over my shoulder, and when I did, he waved to me, vigorously
- a great, bonvoyage, come-back-soon wave. It picked me tip no end. 'What is
he? Crazy?' the Matron of Honor said. I said I hoped so, and opened the door
of the bedroom.
She sat down heavily on one of the twin beds - Seymour's, as a matter of fact.
The phone was on the night table within easy reach. I said I'd bring her a drink
right away. 'Don't bother - I'll be right out,' she said. 'Just close. the door,
if you don't mind. I don't mean it that way, but I can never talk on the phone
unless the door's closed.' I told her I was the exact same way, and started
to leave. But just as I'd turned to come out of the space between the two beds,
I noticed a small collapsible canvas valise over on the window seat. At first
glance, I thought it was mine, miraculously arrived at the apartment, all the
way from Peon Station, under its own steam. My second thought was that it must
be Boo Boo's. I walked over to it. It was unzipped, and just one look at the
top layer of its contents told me who the real owner was. With another, more
inclusive look, I saw something lying on top of two laundered suntan shirts
that I thought ought not to be left alone in the room with the Matron of Honor.
I picked it out of the bag, slipped it under one arm, waved fraternally to the
Matron of Honor, who had already inserted a finger into the first hole of the
number she intended to dial, and was waiting for me to clear out, and then I
closed the door behind me.
I stood for some little time outside the. bedroom, in the gracious solitude
of the hall, wondering what to do with Seymour's diary, which, I ought to rush
to say, was the object I'd picked out of the top of the canvas bag. My first
constructive thought was to hide it till my guests had left. It seemed to me
a good idea to take it into the bathroom and drop it into the laundry hamper.
However, oil a second and much more involved train of thought, I decided to
take it into the bathroom and read parts of it and then drop it into the laundry
hamper.
It was a day, God knows, not only of rampant signs and symbols but of wildly
extensive communication via the written word. If you jumped into crowded cars,
Fate took circuitous pains, before you did any jumping, that you had a pad and
pencil with you, just in case one of your fellow-passengers was a deaf-mute.
If you slipped into bathrooms, you did well to look up to see if there were
any little messages, faintly apocalyptical or otherwise, posted high over the
washbowl.
For years, among the seven children in our one-bathroom family, it was our perhaps
cloying but serviceable custom to leave messages for one another on the medicine-cabinet
mirror, using a moist sliver of soap to write with. The general theme of our
messages usually ran to excessively strong admonitions and, not infrequently,
undisguised threats. 'Boo Boo, pick up your washcloth when you're done with
it. Don't leave it on the floor. Love, Seymour.' ' Walt, your turn to take Z.
and F. to the park. I did it yesterday. Guess who.' 'Wednesday is their anniversary.
Don't go to movies or hang around studio after broadcast or pay forfeit. This
means you, too, Buddy.' 'Mother said Zooey nearly ate the Feenolax. Don't leave
slightly poisonous objects on the sink that he can reach and cat.' These, of
course, are samples straight out of our childhood, but years later, when, in
the name of independence or what-have-you, Seymour and I branched out and took
an apartment of our own, he and I had not more than nominally departed from
the old family custom. That is, we didn't just throw away our old soap fragments.
When I'd checked into the bathroom with Seymour's diary under my arm, and had
carefully secured the door behind me, I spotted a message almost immediately.
It was not, however, in Seymour's handwriting but, unmistakably, in my sister
Boo Boo's. With or without soap, her handwriting was always almost indecipherably
Minute, and she had easily managed to post the following message up on the mirror:
'Raise high the roof beam, carpenters. Like Arcs comes the bridegroom, taller
far than a tall man. Love, Irving Sappho, formerly under contract to Elysium
Studios Ltd. Please be happy happy happy with your beautiful Muriel. This is
an order. I outrank everybody on this block.' The contract writer quoted in the text, I might mention, has always been a great favorite - at appropriately
staggered time intervals - with all the children in our family, largely through
the immeasurable impact of Seymour's taste in poetry on all of us. I read and
reread the quotation, and then I sat down on the edge of the bathtub and opened
Seymour's diary.
What follows is an exact reproduction of the pages from Seymour's diary that I read while I was sitting on the edge of the bathtub. It seems perfectly orderly to me to leave out individual datelines. Suffice it to say, I think, all these entries were made while he was stationed at Forth Monmouth, in late 1941 and early 1942, some several months before the wedding date was set.
'It
was freezing cold at retreat parade this evening, and yet about six men from
our platoon alone fainted during the endless playing of 'The Star-Spangled Banner'.
I suppose if your blood circulation is normal, you can't take the unnatural
military position of attention. Especially if you're holding a leaden rifle
up at Present Arms. I have no circulation, no pulse. Immobility is my home.
The tempo of 'The Star-Spangled Banner' and I are in perfect understanding.
To me, its rhythm is a romantic waltz.
'We got passes till midnight, after the parade. I met Muriel at the Biltmore
at seven. Two drinks, two drugstore tuna-fish sandwiches, then a movie she wanted
to see, something with Greer Garson in it. I looked at her several times in
the dark when Greer Garson's son's plane was missing in action. Her mouth was
open. Absorbed, worried. The identification with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer tragedy
complete. I felt awe and happiness. How I love and need her undiscriminating
heart. She looked over at me when the children in the picture brought in the
kitten to show to their mother. M. loved the kitten and wanted me to love it.
Even inn the dark, I could sense that she felt the usual estrangement from me
when I don't automatically love what she loves. Later, when we were having a
drink at the station, she asked me if I didn't think that kitten was 'rather
nice'. She doesn't use the word 'cute' any more. When did I ever frighten her
out of her normal vocabulary? Bore that I am, I mentioned R. H. Blyth's definition
of sentimentality: that we arc being sentimental when we give to a thing more
tenderness than God gives to it. I said (sententiously?) that God undoubtedly
loves kittens, but not, in all probability, with Technicolor bootees on their
paws. He leaves that creative touch to script writers. M. thought this over,
seemed to agree with me, but the 'knowledge' wasn't too very welcome. She sat
stirring her drink and feeling unclose to me. She worries over the way her love
fir me comes and goes, appears and disappears. She doubts its reality simply
because it isn't as steadily pleasurable as a kitten. God knows it is sad. The
human voice conspires to desecrate everything on earth.'
'Dinner tonight at the Fedders'. Very good. Veal, mashed potatoes, lima beans,
a beautiful oil-and-vinegar green salad. For dessert there was something Muriel
made herself: a kind of frozen cream-cheese affair, with raspberries on it.
It made tears conic to my eyes. (Saigyo says, " What it is I know not/But
with the gratitude/My tears fall.") A bottle of ketchup was placed on the
table near me. Muriel apparently told Mrs Fedder that I put ketchup on everything.
I'd give the world to have seen M. telling her mother defensively that I put
ketchup even on string beans. My precious girl.
'After dinner Mrs Fedder suggested we listen to the program. Her enthusiasm,
her nostalgia for the program, especially for the old days when Buddy and I
were on it, makes me uneasy. Tonight it was broadcast from some naval airbase,
of all places, near San Diego. Much too many pedantic questions and answers.
Franny sounded as though she had a head cold. Zooey was in dreamy top form.
The announcer had them off on the subject of housing developments, and the little
Burke girl said she hated houses that all look alike - meaning a long row of
identical "development" houses. Zooey said they were "nice".
He said it would be very nice to conic home and be in the wrong house. To eat
dinner with the wrong people by mistake, sleep in the wrong bed by mistake,
and kiss everybody goodbye in the morning thinking they were your own family.
He said he even wished everybody in the world looked exactly alike. He said
you'd keep thinking everybody you met was your wife or your mother or father,
and people would always be throwing their arms around each other wherever they
went, and it would look "very nice".
'I felt unbearably happy all evening. The familiarity between Muriel and her
mother struck line as being so beautiful when we were all sitting in the living
room. They know each other's weaknesses, especially conversational weaknesses,
and pick at them with their eyes. Mrs Fedder's eyes watch over Muriel's conversational
taste in "literature", and Muriel's eyes watch over her mother's tendency
to be windy, verbose. When they argue., there can be no danger of a permanent
rift, because they're Mother and Daughter. A terrible and beautiful phenomenon
to watch. Yet there are times when I sit there enchanted that I wish Mr Fedder
were more conversationally active. Sometimes I feel I need him. Sometimes, in
fact, when I come in the front door, it's like entering a kind of untidy, secular,
two-woman convent. Sometimes when I leave, I have a peculiar feeling that both
M. and her mother have stuffed my pockets with little bottles and tubes containing
lipstick, rouge, hair nets, deodorants, and so on. I feel overwhelmingly grateful
to them, but I don't know what to do with their invisible gifts.'
'We
didn't get our passes directly after retreat this evening, because someone dropped
his rifle while the visiting British general was making his inspection. I missed
the 5:52 and was an hour late meeting Muriel. Dinner at Lun Far's on 58th. M.
irritable and tearful throughout dinner, genuinely upset and scared. Her mother
thinks I'm a schizoid personality. Apparently she's spoken to her psychoanalyst
about me, and lie agrees with her. Mrs Fedder has asked Muriel to find out discreetly
if there's any insanity in the family. I gather that Muriel was naive enough
to tell her where I got the scars on lily wrists, poor sweet baby. From what
M. says, however, this doesn't bother her mother nearly so much as a couple
of other things. Three other things. One, I withdraw from and fail to relate
to people. Two, apparently there is something "wrong" with me because
I haven't seduced Muriel. Three, evidently Mrs Fedder has been haunted for days
by my remark at dinner one night that I'd like to be a dead cat. She asked one
at dinner last week what I intended to do after I got out of the Army. Did I
intend to resume teaching at the same college? Would I go back to teaching at
all? Would I consider going back on the radio, possibly as a "commentator"
of some kind? I answered that it seemed to me that the war might go on forever,
and that I was only certain that if peace ever came again I would like to be
a dead cat. Mrs Fedder thought I was cracking a joke of some kind. A sophisticated
joke. She thinks I'm very sophisticated, according to Muriel. She thought any
deadly-serious comment was the sort of joke one ought to acknowledge with a
light, musical laugh. When she laughed, I suppose it distracted me a little,
and I forgot to explain to her. I told Muriel tonight that in Zen Buddhism a
master was once asked what was the most valuable thing in the world, and the
master answered that a dead cat was, because no one could put a price on it.
M. was relieved, but I could see she could hardly wait to get home to assure
her mother of the harmlessness of my remark. She rode to the station with me
in the cab. How sweet she was, and in so much better humor. She was trying to
teach me to smile, spreading the muscles around my mouth with her fingers. How
beautiful it is to sec her laugh. Oh, God, I'm so happy with her. If only she
could be happier with me.. I amuse her at times, and she seems to like my face
and hands and the back of my head, and she gets a vast satisfaction out of telling
her friends that she's engaged to the Billy Black who was on "It's a Wise
Child" for years. And I think she feels a mixed maternal and sexual drive
in lily general direction. But on the whole, I don't make her really happy.
Oh, God, help me. My one terrible consolation is that my beloved has an undying,
basically undeviating love for the institution of marriage itself. She has a
primal urge to play house permanently. Her marital goals are so absurd and touching.
She wants to get a very dark sun tan and go up to the desk clerk in some very
posh hotel and ask if her Husband has picked up the mail yet. She wants to shop
for curtains. She wants to shop for maternity clothes. She wants to get out
of her mother's house, whether she knows it or not, and despite her attachment
to her. She wants children - good-looking children, with her features, not mine.
I have a feeling, too, that she wants her own Christmas tree ornaments to unbox
annually, not her mother's.
'A very funny letter came front Buddy today, written just after he came off
K.P. I think of him as I write about Muriel. He would despise her for her marriage
motives as I've put them down here. But are they despicable? In a way, they
must be, but yet they seem to inc so human - size and beautiful that I can't
think of them even now as I write this without feeling deeply, deeply moved.
He would disapprove of Muriel's mother, too. She's an irritating, opinionated
woman, a type Buddy can't stand. I don't think he could see her for what she
is. A person deprived, for life, of any understanding or taste for the main
current of poetry that flows through things, all things. She might as well be
dead, and yet she goes on living, stopping off at delicatessens, seeing her
analyst, consuming a novel every night, putting on her girdle, plotting for
Muriel's health and prosperity. I love her. I find her unimaginably brave.'
'The
whole company is restricted to the post tonight. Stood in line for a full hour
to get to use the phone in the Rec Room. Muriel sounded rather relieved that
I couldn't get in tonight. Which amuses and delights me. Another girl, if she
genuinely wanted an evening free of her fiancé, would go through the
motions of expressing regret over the phone. M. just said Oh when I told her.
How I worship her simplicity, her terrible honesty. How I rely on it.'
'3:30 A.M. I'm over in the Orderly Room. I couldn't sleep. I put my coat on
over my pajamas and came over here. Al Aspesi is C.Q. He's asleep on the. floor.
I can stay here if I answer the phone for him. What a night. Mrs Fedder's analyst
was there for dinner and grilled me, off and on, till about eleventhirty. Occasionally
with great skill, intelligence. Once or twice, I found myself pulling for him.
Apparently he's an old fail of Buddy's and mine. He seemed personally as well
as professionally interested in why I'd been bounced off the show at sixteen.
He'd actually heard the Lincoln broadcast, but he had the impression that I'd
said over the air that the Gettysburg Address was 'bad for children.' Not true.
I told him I'd said I thought it was a bad speech for children to have to memorize
in school. He also had the impression I'd said it was a dishonest speech. I
told him I'd said that 51,112 men were casualties at Gettysburg, and that if
someone had to speak at the anniversary of the event, he should simply have
come forward and shaken his fist at his audience and then walked off- that is,
if the speaker was an absolutely honest man. He didn't disagree with me, but
he seemed to feel that I have a perfection complex of some kind. Much talk from
him, and quite intelligent, oil the virtues of living the imperfect life, of
accepting one's own and others' weaknesses. I agree with him, but only in theory.
I'll champion indiscrimination till doomsday, on the ground that it leads to
health and a kind of very real, enviable happiness. Followed petrel y it's the
way of the Tao, and undoubtedly the highest way. But for a discriminating man
to achieve this, it would mean that he would have to dispossess himself of poetry,
go beyond poetry. That is, he couldn't possibly leans or drive himself to like
bad poetry in the abstract, let alone equate it with good poetry. I-le would
have to drop poetry altogether. I said it would be no easy thing to do. Dr Sims
said I was putting it too stringently - putting it, he said, as only a perfectionist
would. Cant I deny that?
'Evidently Mrs Fedder had nervously told him about Charlotte's nine stitches.
It was rash, I suppose, to have mentioned that old finished business to Muriel.
She passes everything along to her mother while it's hot. I should object, no
doubt, but I can't. M. can only hear me when her mother is listening, too, poor
baby. But I had no intention of discussing Charlotte's stitches with Sims. Not
over just one drink.
'I more or less promised M. at the station tonight that I'll go to a psychoanalyst
one of these days. Sims told me that the man right here on the post is very
good. Evidently he and Mrs Fedder have had a tìte-á-tìte
or two on the subject. Why doesn't this rankle nee? It doesn't. It seems funny.
It warms me, for no good reason. Even stock mothers-in-law in the funny papers
have always remotely appealed to me. Anyway, I can't see that I have anything
to lose by seeing an analyst. If I do it in the Army, it'll be free. M. loves
me, but she'll never feel really close to me, familiar with me, frivolous with
me, till I'm slightly overhauled.
'If or when I do start going to all analyst, I hope to God he has the foresight
to let a dermatologist sit in on consultation. A hand specialist. I have scars
on my hands from touching certain people. Once, in the park, when Franny was
still in the carriage, I put my hand on the downy pate of her head and left
it there too long. Another time, at Loew's Seventy-second Street, with Zooey
during a spooky movie. He was about six or seven, and he went under the seat
to avoid watching a scary scene. I put my hand on his head. Certain heads, certain
colors and textures of human hair leave permanent marks on me. Other things,
too. Charlotte once ran away from me, outside the studio, and I grabbed her
dress to stop her, to keep her near me. A yellow cotton dress I loved because
it was too long for her. I still have a lemon-yellow mark on the palm of my
right hand. Oh, God, if I'm anything by a clinical name, I'm a kind of paranoiac
in reverse. I suspect people of plotting to make me happy.'
I remember closing the diary - actually, slamming it shut - after the word 'happy'.
I then sat for several minutes with the diary wider one arm, until I became
conscious of a certain discomfort from having sat so long on the side of the
bathtub. When I stood up, I found I was perspiring more profusely than I had
all day, as though I had just got out of a tub, rather than just been sitting
on the side of one. I went over to the laundry hamper, raised the lid, and,
with all almost vicious wrist movement, literally threw Seymour's diary into
some sheets and pillowcases that were on the bottom of the hamper. Then, for
want of a better, more constructive idea, I went back arid sat down on the side
of the bathtub again. I stared for a minute or two at Boo Boo's message on the
medicine-cabinet mirror, and then I left the bathroom, closing the door excessively
hard after are, as though sheer force might lock up the place forever after.
My next stop was the kitchen. Fortunately, it led off the hall, arid I could
get there without having to go through the living room and face my guests. On
arrival, and with the swinging door closed behind me, I took off my coat - my
tunic - and dropped it across the enamel table. It seemed to require all my
energy just to take off in), coat, and I stood for some time, in my T shirt,
just resting up, as it were, before taking on the herculean task of mixing drinks.
Then, abruptly, as though I were being invisibly policed through small apertures
in the wall, I began: to open cabinet and refrigerator doors, looking for Tom
Collins ingredients. They were all there, except for lemons instead of limes,
and in a few minutes I had a somewhat sugary pitcherful of Collinses made. I
took down five glasses, and then looked around for a tray. It was just hard
enough to find a tray, and it took me just long enough, so that by the time
I did find one, I was giving out small, faintly audible whimpers as I opened
arid shut cabinet doors.
Just as I was starting out of the kitchen, with the pitcher and glasses loaded
oil the tray, and with lily coat back on, an imaginary light bulb was turned
on over my head - the way it is in comic strips to show that a character has
a sudden very bright idea. I put down the tray on the floor. I went back over
to the liquor shelf and took down a half-full fifth of Scotch. I brought my
glass over and poured myself out - somewhat accidentally - at least four fingers
of Scotch. I looked at the glass critically for a split second, and then, like
a tried-and-true leading man in a Western movie, drank it off in one deadpan
toss. A little piece of business, I might well mention, that I record here with
a rather distinct shudder. Granted that I was twenty-three, and that I may have
been doing only what any red-blooded twenty-three-year-old simpleton would have
done under similar circumstances. I don't mean anything quite so simple as that.
I mean I am Not a Drinker, as the expression goes. On an ounce of whisky, as
a rule, I either get violently sick or I start scanning the room for unbelievers.
On two ounces I've been known to pass out cold.
This was, however - by way of an unparalleled understatement-no ordinary day,
and I remember that as I picked up the tray again arid started to leave the
kitchen, I felt none of the usual almost immediate metamorphic changes. There
seemed to be air unprecedented degree of heat being generated in the subject's
stomach, but that was all.
In the living room, as I brought in the loaded tray, there were no auspicious
changes in the deportment of my guests, beyond the revitalizing fact that the
bride's father's uncle had rejoined the group. He was ensconced in my dead Boston
bull's old chair. His tiny legs were crossed, his hair was combed, his gravy
stain was as arresting as ever, and - lo and behold - his cigar was lighted.
We greeted each other even more extravagantly than usual, as though these intermittent
separations were suddenly too long and unnecessary for either of us to bear
with.
The Lieutenant was still over at the bookshelves. He stood turning the pages
of a book he'd taken out, apparently engrossed in it. (I never did find out
which book it was.) Mrs Silsburn, looking considerably pulled together, even
refreshed, with her pancake makeup, I thought, newly attended to, was seated
on the couch now, in the corner of it farthest away from the bride's father's
uncle. She was leafing through a magazine. 'Oh, how lovely!' she said, in a
party voice, as she sighted the tray I'd just put down on the coffee table.
She smiled up at me convivially.
'I've put very little gin in it,' I lied as I began to stir the pitcher.
'It's so lovely and cool in here now,' Mrs Silsburn said. 'May I ask you a question,
incidentally?' With that, she put aside her magazine, got up, and crossed around
the couch and over to the desk. She reached up and placed a fingertip on one
of the photographs on the wall. ' Who is this beautiful child?' she asked me.
With the air-conditioner now smoothly and steadily in operation, and having
had time to apply fresh makeup, she was no longer the wilted, timorous child
who had stood in the hot sun outside Schrafft's Seventy-ninth Street. She was
addressing me now with all the brittle equipoise that had been at her disposal
when I first jumped into the car, outside the bride's grandmother's house, when
she asked me if I was someone named Dickie Briganza.
I left off stirring the pitcher of Collinses, and went around and over to her.
She had fixed a lacquered fingernail on the photograph of the 1929 cast of 'It's
a Wise Child', and on one child in particular. Seven of us were sitting around
a circular table, a microphone in front of each child. 'That's the most beautiful
child I've ever laid eyes on,' Mrs Silsburn said. 'You know who she looks a
teeny bit like? Around the eyes and mouth?'
At about that point, some of the Scotch - roughly a finger of it, I'd say -
was beginning to affect me, and I very nearly answered, 'Dickie Briganza', but
a certain cautionary impulse still prevailed. I nodded, and said the name of
the motion-picture actress whorl the Matron of Honor, earlier in the afternoon,'
had mentioned in connexion with nine surgical stitches.
Mrs Silsburn stared at me. 'Was sire on "It's a Wise Child"?' she
asked.
'For about two years, yes. God, yes. Under her own name, of course. Charlotte
Mayhew.'
The Lieutenant was now behind me, at my right, looking up at the photograph.
At the drop of Charlotte's professional name, he had stepped over from the bookshelves
to have a look.
'I didn't know she was ever on the radio as a child!' Mrs Silsburn said. 'I
didn't know that! Was she so brilliant as a child?'
'No, she was mostly just noisy, really. She sang as well then as she does now,
though. And she was wonderful moral support. She usually arranged things so
that she sat next to my brother Seymour at the broadcasting table, and whenever
he said anything on the show that delighted her, she used to step on his foot.
It was like a hand squeeze, only she used her foot.' As I delivered this little
homily, I had my hands on the top rung of the straight chair at the desk. They
suddenly slipped off- rather in the way one's elbow can abruptly lose its 'footing'
on the surface of a table or a bar counter. I lost and regained my balance almost
simultaneously, though, and neither Mrs Silsburn nor the Lieutenant seemed to
notice it. I folded my arms. 'On certain nights when he was in especially good
form, Seymour used to come home with a slight limp. That's really true. Charlotte
didn't just step on his foot, she tramped on it. He didn't care. He loved people
who stepped on his feet. He loved noisy girls_'
'Well, isn't that interesting!' Mrs Silsburn said. 'I certainly never knew she
was ever on the radio or anything.'
' Seymour got her on, actually,' I said. 'She was the daughter of an osteopath
who lived in our building on Riverside Drive.' I replaced my hands on the rung
of the straight chair, and leaned my weight forward on it, partly for support,
partly in the style of an old backfence reminiscer. The sound of my own voice
was now singularly pleasing to me. 'We were playing stoopball - Are either of
you at all interested in this?'
'Yes!' said Mrs Silsburn.
'We were playing stoopball on the side of the building one afternoon after school,
Seymour and I, and somebody who turned out to be Charlotte started dropping
marbles on us from the twelfth storey. That's how we met. We got her on the
program that same week. We didn't even know she could swig. We just wanted her
because she had such a beautiful New Yorkese accent. She had a Dyckman Street
accent.'
Mrs Silsburn laughed the kind of tinkling laugh that is, of course, death to
the sensitive anecdotist, cold sober or otherwise. She had evidently been waiting
for me to finish, so that she could make a single-minded appeal to the Lieutenant.
'Who does she look like to you?' she said to him importunately. 'Around the
eyes and mouth especially. Who does she remind you of?'
The Lieutenant looked at her, then up at the photograph. 'You mean the way she
is in this picture? As a kid?' he said. 'Or now? The way she is in the movies?
Which do you mean?'
'Both, really, I think. But especially right here in this picture.'
The Lieutenant scrutinized the photograph - rather severely, I thought, as though
he by no means approved of the way Mrs Silsburn, who after all was a civilian
as well as a woman, had asked him to examine it. ' Muriel,' he said shortly.
'Looks like Muriel in this picture. The hair and all.'
'But exactly!' said Mrs Silsburn. She turned to me. 'But exactly,' she repeated.
'Have you ever met Muriel? I mean have you ever seen her when she's had her
hair tied in a lovely big -'
'I've never seen Muriel at all until today,' I said.
'Well, all right, just take my word.' Mrs Silsburn tapped the photograph impressively
with her index finger. 'This child could double for Muriel at that age. But
to a T.'
The whisky was steadily edging up on me, and I couldn't quite take in this information
whole, let alone consider its many possible ramifications. I walked back over-just
a trifle straight-linishly, I think - to the coffee table and resumed stirring
the pitcher of Collinses. The bride's father's uncle tried to get my attention
as I came back into his vicinity, to greet me on my reappearance, but I was
just abstracted enough by the alleged fact of Muriel's resemblance to Charlotte
not to respond to him. I was feeling just a trifle dizzy. I had a strong impulse,
which I didn't indulge, to stir the pitcher from a seated position on the floor.
A minute or two later, as I was just starting to pour out the drinks, Mrs Silsburn
had a question for me. It all but sang its way across the room to me, so melodiously
was it pitched. 'Would it be very awful if I asked about that accident Mrs Burwick
happened to mention before? I mean those nine stitches she spoke of. Did your
brother accidentally push her or something like that, I mean?'
I put down the pitcher, which seemed extraordinarily heavy and unwieldy, and
looked over at her. Oddly, despite the mild dizziness I was feeling, distant
images hadn't begun to blur in the least. If anything, Mrs Silsburn as a focal
point across the room seemed rather obtrusively distant. 'Who's Mrs Burwick?'
I said.
'My wife,' the Lieutenant answered, a trifle shortly. He was looking over at
me, too, if only as a committee of one to investigate what was taking me so
long with the drinks.
' Oh. Certainly she is,' I said.
'Was it an accident?' Mrs Silsburn pressed. 'He didn't mean to do it, did he?'
'Oh, God, Mrs Silsburn.'
' I beg your pardon?' she said coldly.
'I'm sorry. Don't pay any attention to me. I'm getting a little tight. I poured
myself a great drink in the kitchen about five minutes -' I broke off, and turned
abruptly around. I'd just heard a familiar heavy tread in the uncarpeted hall.
It was conning toward us - at us - at a great rate, and in an instant the Matron
of Honor jounced into tile room.
She had eyes for no one. 'I finally got them,' she said. Her voice sounded strangely
levelled off, stripped of even the ghost of italics. 'After about an hour.'
Her face looked tense and overheated to the bursting point. 'Is that cold?'
she said, and came without stopping, and unanswered, over to the coffee table.
She picked tip the one glass I'd half filled a minute or so before, and drank
it off in one greedy tilt. 'That's the hottest room I've ever been in in my
entire life,' she said - rather impersonally - and set down her empty glass.
She picked up the pitcher and refilled the glass halfway, with much clinking
and plopping of ice cubes.
Mrs Silsburn was already well iii the vicinity of the coffee table. 'What'd
they say?' she asked impatiently. 'Did you speak to Rhea?'
The Matron of Honor drank first. ' I spoke to everybody,' she said, putting
down her glass, and with a grim but, for her, peculiarly undramatic emphasis
on 'everybody'. She looked first at Mrs Silsburn, then at me, then at the Lieutenant.
'You can all relax,' she said. 'Everything's just fine and dandy.'
'What do you mean? What happened?' Mrs Silsburn said sharply.
'Just what I said. The groom's no longer indisposed by happiness.' A familiar
style of inflection was back in the Matron of Honor's voice.
'How come? Who'd you talk to?' the Lieutenant said to her. 'Did you talk to
Mrs Fedder?'
'I said I talked to everybody. Everybody but the blushing bride. She and the
groom've eloped.' She turned to me. 'How much sugar did you put in this thing,
anyway?' she asked irritably. 'It tastes like absolute -'
'Eloped?' said Mrs Silsburn, and put her hand to her throat.
The Matron of Honor looked at her. 'All right, just relax now,' she advised.
'You'll live longer.'
Mrs Silsburn sat down inertly on the couch - right beside me, as a matter of
fact. I was staring up at the Matron of Honor, and I' in sure Mrs Silsburn immediately
followed suit.
'Apparently he was at the apartment when they got back. So Muriel just ups and
packs her bag, and off the two of them go, just like that.' The Matron of Honor
shrugged her shoulders elaborately. She picked up her glass again and finished
her drink. 'Anyway, we're all invited to the reception. Or whatever you call
it when the bride and groom have already left. From what I gathered, there's
a whole mob of people over there already. Everybody sounded so gay on the phone.'
'You said you talked to Mrs Fedder. What'd she say?' the Lieutenant said.
The Matron of Honor shook her head, rather cryptically. 'She was wonderful.
My God, what a woman. She sounded absolutely normal. From what I gathered -
I mean from what she said - this Seymour's promised to start going to an analyst
and get himself straightened out.' She shrugged her shoulders again. 'Who knows?
Maybe everything's gonna be hunky-dory. I'm too pooped to think any more.' She
looked at her husband. 'Let's go. Where's your little hat?'
The next thing I knew, the Matron of Honor, the Lieutenant, and Mrs Silsburn
were all filing toward the front door, with me, as their host, following behind
them. I was weaving now very obviously, but since no one turned around, I think
my
condition went unnoticed.
I heard Mrs Silsburn say to the Matron of Honor, 'Are you going to stop by there,
or what?'
'I don't know,' carne the reply. 'If we do, it'll just be for a minute.'
The Lieutenant rang the elevator bell, and the three stood leadenly watching
the indicator dial. No one seemed to have any further use for speech. I stood
inn the doorway of the apartment, a few feet away, dimly looking on. When the
elevator door opened, I said goodbye, aloud, and their three heads turned in
unison toward me. 'Oh, goodbye,' they called over, and I heard the Matron of
Honor shout 'Thanks for the drink!' as the elevator door closed behind them.
I
went back into the apartment, very unsteadily, trying to unbutton my tunic as
I wandered along, or to yank it open.
My return to the living room was unreservedly hailed by my one remaining guest
- whom I'd forgotten. He raised a wellfilled glass at me as I came into the
room. In fact, he literally waved it at me, wagging his head up and down and
grinning, as though the supreme, jubilant moment we had both been long awaiting
had finally arrived. I found I couldn't quite match grins with him at this particular
reunion. I remember patting him on the shoulder, though. Then I went over and
sat down heavily on the couch, directly opposite him, and finished yanking open
my coat. 'Don't you have a home to go to?' I asked him. 'Who looks after you?
The pigeons inn the park?' In response to these provocative questions, my guest
toasted me with increased gusto, wielding his Torn Collins at me as though it
were a beer stein. I closed my eyes and lay back on the couch, putting my feet
up and stretching out flat. But this made the room spin. I sat up and swung
my feet around to the floor - doing it so suddenly and with such poor coordination
that I had to put my hand on the coffee table to keep my balance. I sat slumped
forward for a minute or two, with my eyes closed. Then, without having to get
up, I reached for the Toni Collins pitcher and poured myself out a drink, spilling
any amount of liquid and ice cubes onto the table and floor. I sat with the
filled glass in my hands for some more minutes, without drinking, and then I
put it down in a shallow puddle on the coffee table. 'Would you like to know
how Charlotte got those nine stitches?' I asked suddenly, in a tone of voice
that sounded perfectly normal to me. 'We were up at the Lake. Seymour had written
to Charlotte, inviting her to come up and visit us, and her mother finally let
her. What happened was, she sat down in the middle of our driveway one morning
to pet Boo Boo's cat, and Seymour threw a stone at her. He was twelve. That's
all there was to it. He threw it at her because she looked so beautiful sitting
there in the middle of the driveway with Boo Boo's cat. Everybody knew that,
for God's sake - me, Charlotte, Boo Boo, Walker, Walt, the whole family.' I
stared at the pewter ashtray on the coffee table. 'Charlotte never said a word
to him about it. Not a word.' I looked up at my guest, rather expecting him
to dispute me, to call me a liar. I am a liar, of course. Charlotte never did
understand why Seymour threw that stone at her. My guest didn't dispute me,
though. The contrary. He grinned at me encouragingly, as though anything further
I had to say on the subject could go down only as the absolute truth with him.
I got up, though, and left the room. I remember considering, halfway across
the room, going back and picking up two ice cubes that were on the floor, but
it seemed too arduous an undertaking, and I continued along to the hall. As
I passed the kitchen door, I took off my tunic - peeled it off- and dropped
it on the floor. It seemed, at the time, like the place where I always left
my coat.
In the bathroom, I stood for several minutes over the laundry hamper, debating
whether I should or shouldn't take out Seymour's diary and look at it again.
I don't remember any more what arguments I advanced on the subject, either pro
or con, but I did finally open the hamper and pick out the diary. I sat down
with it, on the side of the bathtub again, and riffled the pages till I came
to the very last entry Seymour bad made:
'One of the men just called the flight line again. If the ceiling keeps lifting,
apparently we can get off before morning. Oppenheim says not to hold our breaths.
I phoned Muriel to tell her. It was very strange. She answered the phone and
kept saying hello. My voice wouldn't work. She very nearly hung up. If only
I could calm down a little. Oppenheim is going to hit the sack till the flight
line calls us back. I should, too, but I'm too keyed up. I really called to
ask her, to beg for the last time to just go off alone with me and get married.
I'm too keyed tip to be with people. I feel as though I'm about to be born.
Sacred, sacred day. The connexion was so bad, mid I couldn't talk at all during
most of the call. How terrible it is when you say I love you and the person
at the other end shouts back "What?" I've been reading a miscellany
of Vedanta all day. Marriage partners are to serve each other. Elevate, help,
teach, strengthen each other, but above all, serve. Raise their children honorably,
lovingly, and with detachment. A child is a guest in the house, to be loved
and respected - never possessed, since he belongs to God. How wonderful, how
sane, how beautifully difficult, and therefore true. The joy of responsibility
for the first time in my life. Oppenheim is already in the sack. I should be,
too, but I can't. Someone must sit up with the happy man.'
I read the entry through just once, then closed the diary and brought it back
to the bedroom with me. I dropped it into Seymour's canvas bag, on the window
seat. Then I fell, more or less deliberately, on the nearer of the two beds.
I was asleep - or, possibly, out cold - before I landed, or so it seemed.
When I wakened, about an hour and a half later, I had a splitting headache and
a parched mouth. The room was all but dark. I remember sitting for rather a
long time on the edge of the bed. Then, in the cause of a great thirst, I got
up and gravitated slowly toward the living room, hoping there were still some
cold and wet remnants in the pitcher on the coffee table.
My last guest had evidently let himself out of the apartment. Only his empty
glass, and his cigar end in the pewter ashtray, indicated that he had ever existed.
I still rather think his cigar end should have been forwarded on to Seymour,
the usual run of wedding gifts being what it is. Just the cigar, in a small,
nice box. Possibly with a blank sheet of paper enclosed, by way of explanation.