In a Yellow Wood

By Gore Vidal

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Title: In a Yellow Wood

Author: Gore Vidal

Release Date: December 13, 2021 [eBook #66940]

Language: English


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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN A YELLOW WOOD ***


                          TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES

In the plain text version words in Italics are denoted by _underscores_.

The book cover was modified by the transcriber and has been added to
the public domain.

A number of words in this book have both hyphenated and non-hyphenated
variants. For the words with both variants present the one more used
has been kept.

Obvious punctuation and other printing errors have been corrected.

The Table of Contents was added by the transcriber.


                   *       *       *       *       *


                           IN A YELLOW WOOD


                 NOVELS BY _Gore Vidal_

                 IN A YELLOW WOOD
                 WILLIWAW




                                 IN A
                              YELLOW WOOD

                                  By

                              GORE VIDAL

                            [Illustration]

                                 1947

                     E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY, INC.

                               NEW YORK


          _Copyright, 1947, by E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc._
           _All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A._

                            [Illustration]

                             FIRST EDITION

            NO PART _of this book may be reproduced
            in any form without permission in writing
            from the publisher, except by a reviewer
            who wishes to quote brief passages in connection
            with a review written for inclusion in
            magazine or newspaper or radio broadcast._


         _American Book-Stratford Press, Inc., New York_


                         _For Anais Nin_


            _All of the characters, all of the events and
          most of the places in this book are fictitious._




                                 CONTENT

                                                           Pg.

            1 DAY                                           7

            CHAPTER ONE                                     9

            CHAPTER TWO                                    18

            CHAPTER THREE                                  31

            CHAPTER FOUR                                   46

            CHAPTER FIVE                                   59

            CHAPTER SIX                                    73

            CHAPTER SEVEN                                  86

            CHAPTER EIGHT                                 103


            2 NIGHT                                       113

            CHAPTER NINE                                  115

            CHAPTER TEN                                   143

            CHAPTER ELEVEN                                166

            CHAPTER TWELVE                                180

            3 THE YELLOW WOOD                             195

            CHAPTER THIRTEEN                              197

            CHAPTER FOURTEEN                              209




                                   1
                                  DAY


                        _Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
                           And sorry I could not travel both
                           And be one traveller._...

                                            --FROST


From _Collected Poems_ by Robert Frost. Copyright, 1930, 1939, by
Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright, 1936, by Robert Frost.




                          _Chapter One_

Robert Holton removed several dark hairs from his comb and wondered if
his hairline was receding. He squinted for a moment at himself in the
mirror and decided that he was not losing his hair, not yet anyway.

Then he sat down on the edge of the bed and put on his shoes. He
started to tie the laces of the left shoe when he began to think of his
dream. He had many dreams: of flying through the air, of walking in
empty rooms, of all the standard things that psychiatrists like to hear
about. Unfortunately, in the morning he could seldom recall what he had
dreamed the night before. He would remember the sensation of the dream
but nothing else. He would remember if it had been good or bad but that
was all. Last night his dream had been unpleasant and something in the
room had suddenly recalled it to him.

Robert Holton frowned and tried to remember. Was it the carpet? He had
looked at the carpet while tying his shoe. He looked at it now. The
carpet was dusty and uninteresting. It was a solid brown color; the
same carpet that covered the floor of every hotel room in New York. No,
the carpet was not connected with his dream.

He had been standing at the dresser while combing his hair. He looked
at the dresser: plain dull wood with dull scroll work about the mirror.
On the dresser was a dingy white cloth and on the cloth were a pair
of brushes, his wallet, and a collection of small things. Nothing
suggested an unpleasant dream.

The morning light glowed yellowly through the window shade. There was a
band of brighter light between the bottom of the shade and the window
sill and here the daylight shone into the square room where Robert
Holton lived. He looked at the sunlight a moment and forgot his dream.

He glanced at his watch: fifteen minutes to eight. He had to be at the
office at eight-thirty. Quickly he tied his shoes and got to his feet.
He searched through the bureau drawers for a shirt. He found a white
one and put it on. Before the war he had worn colored shirts but now
plain white ones seemed more sound. And then it was a good idea not to
be too vivid when you worked for a brokerage house.

His tie was pretty, though. It was a striped one, blue and white. Not
a dark sullen blue but a light and casual blue. As he knotted his tie
in front of the mirror he noticed his face was pale. He was always pale
in the morning, of course; still, he looked unhealthy in the city. This
morning he looked paler than usual. There were no pouches under his
eyes, though, and he was glad of that. Robert Holton looked younger
than twenty-six. His features were boyish and undistinguished and
certain women had said that he was handsome. Robert Holton had looked
well in uniform.

He put on his trousers and tightened the belt. Robert Holton, though he
had never been much of an athlete, had a good build. Sitting at desks,
however, would ruin it sooner or later and the thought made him sad.
There was nothing he could do, of course, for he would always sit at
desks.

He picked up his coat from the chair where he had hung it the night
before and put it on. He posed for a moment in front of the mirror.
Perhaps he was not handsome but he was nicer looking than a great many
people and it is better to be nicer looking than a great many people
than to be unusually handsome.

Robert Holton turned from the window and went into the bathroom. His
watch was on the tile floor beside the bathtub where he had left it the
night before. He set the watch by his alarm clock.

Again he tried to recall his dream. On the wall there was a picture
of some apples on a table. A Frenchman had painted the picture twenty
years before. It had been reproduced and the hotel had bought several
copies because they were cheap and because the manager’s wife had
thought the picture pleasant. Robert Holton liked the picture. It
seemed to suggest his dream to him more than anything else in the room.
He studied the picture but he could not remember the dream. The picture
only made him uneasy. He looked away.

He went to the closet and took out his trench coat. He had bought it
when he became a lieutenant three years before.

It was almost eight o’clock now. Robert Holton opened the door of his
room and stepped out into the corridor.

There was a difference in smell. The corridor smelled old and dusty as
though no one had walked down it in years. Robert Holton in the one
year he had lived in this hotel had never seen anyone else come out of
a room. Sometimes he wondered if he might not be the only person living
on this floor, or in this hotel, or in the world.

The ceiling of the corridor was high and he enjoyed walking under such
a high ceiling. He walked to the elevator and pressed the button marked
“Down.”

There was a large pot filled with white sand beside the elevator door.
He had always wanted to put something into that white sand. A cigarette
butt, anything at all to spoil the white smooth surface. One day he
would spit on the sand; he made himself that promise.

There was a clatter as the elevator went past his floor. That always
happened. He pushed the button angrily.

Robert Holton tried to recall what he was supposed to do that day at
the office. He could think of nothing very important that had to be
done. In the afternoon he was supposed to go to a cocktail party and
he looked forward to that. Mrs Raymond Stevanson was giving it and she
was a very proper person to know. She had been a friend of his mother’s
and she had been nice to Robert Holton when his mother had died several
years earlier. His father thought Mrs Raymond Stevanson was stupid but
his father was often harsh and she was, after all, important socially.
When one was starting out in the brokerage business contacts were
important. He began to map his day in detail.

There was a loud rattling and the elevator stopped at his floor. The
door opened and Robert Holton stepped into the elevator.

“Good morning, Mr Holton,” said the elevator boy, a young man in his
middle teens.

“Good morning, Joe. What kind of a day is it?”

“Wonderful out. Real warm for this time of year. Real Indian summer
outside. Real nice weather.”

“That’s fine,” said Robert Holton, glad to hear that the weather was
good.

“Any news on the market?” asked Joe, stopping at the seventh floor.

“Nothing new.” A middle-aged man, tall and thin, came into the
elevator. Robert Holton had seen him almost every day for a year but
they never spoke. The middle-aged man wore a black shiny topcoat and he
carried a large leather brief case in which the outlines of an apple
could be seen.

“I guess there’s nothing for me to put my money in, I guess,” said Joe.

“I shouldn’t advise buying now,” said Robert Holton. It was a daily
joke of theirs. Joe would pretend he had money to invest and wanted
advice.

They stopped at the second floor and another tall thin man in a shiny
black overcoat got into the elevator. This man had a red face, though,
and the other man had a white face. Neither of them ever spoke. Robert
Holton often wondered what they did for a living, whether they had
wives or not.

“Well, here we are,” said Joe, opening the door. “We made it all right
this time.”

“We certainly did.” Robert Holton followed the two older men out of the
elevator and into the lobby.

The lobby was high-ceilinged and old-fashioned. Tropical bushes grew
in buckets and a gray chandelier was suspended from the center of the
ceiling. At the desk sat a faded little woman.

She nodded to Robert Holton and he nodded to her. They never spoke. He
picked up a newspaper from the desk, looked at his mail box to see if
he might have overlooked something the night before. Finding nothing,
he put three cents in a saucer beside the newspapers.

Robert Holton went outside. The morning was clear and cool. There was
a depth, a golden depth in the air. There was no time of the year as
pleasant as autumn, thought Robert Holton; unless it was spring. He
liked spring, too.

He walked down the not yet busy side street where he lived. His
footsteps sounded sharp and loud on the pavement. The brownstone houses
that lined the street seemed large and significant this morning.
Perhaps it was because of the clearness of the day. He noticed details
in the stone that he had never noticed before. For instance, one of
the houses was built of oddly pitted stone. He had seen another place
built of pitted stone. He thought a moment: Notre Dame, the cathedral
in Paris. During the war he had seen it. He had even walked up a great
many winding steps to get to the top. At the top he had noticed the
pitted stone which had proved, somehow or other, that the building was
very old.

Sleepy children were coming out of the houses. They walked down the
street to the bus stop, schoolbooks under their arms. There was a smell
of bacon and coffee in the air and Robert Holton’s stomach contracted
hungrily.

At the end of the street was the subway station. Every morning he
disappeared down it and every evening he came up out of it. He spent a
lot of time in the subway.

He went down the dirty cement steps. He put a nickel into the turnstile
and walked out onto the cement platform. Twenty or thirty men and women
stood on the platform with him, waiting for the downtown train.

The express went crashing by them. The noise of these trains was
terrific. After it had passed he had to yawn several times to clear the
deafness from his ears. Then the local stopped and he got aboard.

He sat next to a stout man who lived in his hotel. Occasionally they
would speak.

“How’s the market?” asked the fat man, deciding not to read his paper.

“The market’s doing fine, should go up.”

“Well, that sure is good news. I’ve a little bit that I’d like to
put in it. I’d like to put it in something safe, though. You know of
something safe? Something that’s going to go way up, say?”

“Well, that’s a hard question. It’s very hard to tell just yet. Sugar’s
doing well,” said Robert Holton. He always said the same things to
these questions. No one cared what he said. They would repeat it to
acquaintances, saying that a friend of theirs in Wall Street had
advised them to buy sugar but they didn’t feel it was such a good buy
at this time.

“You was in the army, weren’t you?” asked the stout man suddenly.

Robert Holton nodded.

“Been out long?”

“Over a year.”

“I’ll bet you was glad to get out. To get away from all those rules and
things, those restrictions. I was in the army in the last war. I guess
the one before last, you’d call it now. I was sure glad to get out.”

“Everyone is,” said Robert Holton and he thought of the things that he
had done in London. He had liked London.

“You went to college, didn’t you?” asked the stout man; he was trying
to clear up something in his mind.

“That’s right.”

“That’s what I thought. Me, I never had the opportunity. I had to go
to work,” said the stout man with pride. “I had to work when I was a
youngster. I never went to college.”

“It’s a good experience,” said Robert Holton, wishing the man would
read his paper and stop asking questions. The train went around a
corner noisily; blue electric sparks sparkled outside the window. Then
the train straightened out again.

“I’m in the grocery business,” said the stout man.

“I know,” said Robert Holton, “we’ve talked about that before.”

“I started right in at the bottom,” said the stout man.

“That’s the best place to start,” said Robert Holton, feeling that
there was no answer to this. He was wrong.

“Well, I don’t know. It’s hard to say. How _did_ you like the
army?”

“It wasn’t bad.”

“It wasn’t good neither. I never got overseas last time, I mean time
before last, but we had it rough in training.”

“I can imagine.” Robert Holton looked away and the stout man stopped
talking. Robert Holton looked at the upper moulding of the car to see
if there were any new advertisements. There weren’t any. His special
favorite, a girl advertising beer, was behind him and he couldn’t see
it. Gloomily he examined a fat red child devouring a piece of bread.
This was the advertisement he liked least. He looked away.

A woman with a small child sat across from him, directly under the
bread advertisement. The woman was heavy with a roll of flesh around
her middle; she wore a tight black dress. The child with her was about
the age of the one in the picture. This child was pale, though, pale
and fat.

A Negro was asleep next to the woman and child. He was long and thin
and his bare ankles and wrists looked like brown wood. Two Jewish
secretaries with yellow hair talked brightly together. They were young
women and wore gaily colored clothes and their plump legs were hairless
and pink.

An old woman with gray hair and deep lines in her face looked at the
two young women and seemed to hate them in a secret womanly manner.
Several young boys, wearing discarded army clothing, sat in a corner,
their schoolbooks beside them. They talked in hoarse changing voices.
Robert Holton could not hear what they were saying but their voices
seemed to speak of sexual things.

The train stopped at a station and the stout man left. Two more stops
and Robert Holton would get off.

The car was beginning to empty. Only the two girls were opposite him.
They still talked brightly and laughed too loudly, conscious that he
was watching them.

The train made its two stops and the girls got off. No one sat opposite
him now. He studied the advertisements.

Then his stop was made. Quickly he got up, his trench coat under his
arm. He went out onto the platform and before the train left he looked
in again through the window. Slightly to the right of where he had been
sitting was the picture of the girl advertising beer. He looked at her
until the train pulled out.

When the train was gone he turned and walked up the dirty cement steps
and as he walked he wished that he had a girl as pretty as the one who
advertised beer.




                             _Chapter Two_


“Hurry up, Marjorie. Let’s get those tables cleaned up.”

“Yes,” said Marjorie Ventusa, “yes, Mrs Merrin, I certainly will,” she
spoke sweetly, hoping that Mrs Merrin would get the sarcasm in her
voice but Mrs Merrin was already at the other end of the restaurant
talking to another waitress.

Marjorie pushed her natural blonde hair out of her eyes. She was never
able to keep it in order; perhaps she should have it cut shorter, wear
a snood perhaps. Mrs Merrin was watching her, she noticed. Quickly
Marjorie began to put the dirty dishes on her tray.

People were coming in and out of the restaurant. It got a lot of
the less wealthy Wall Street trade. Clerks and secretaries and
stenographers had breakfast and lunch here and the lonelier ones had
supper here. When her tray was full she went back to the kitchen.

On the other side of the swinging doors the cooks, wearing fairly
clean aprons and white hats, were cooking at ranges. There was always
steam and the smell of soap in the air. People shouted at one another
and it was like a war. Marjorie hated the kitchen. The front part of
the restaurant was all right. She had been a waitress off and on for
fifteen years and she didn’t mind noisy people and the clattering of
dishes.

She put some glasses of water on her tray before she left the kitchen.
Then Marjorie Ventusa gave the swinging door a kick and walked back
into the dining room. She had five tables to take care of.

Two women were seated at the table she had just cleared. She could tell
from the backs of their heads that they were secretaries and older
women; this meant they would be very particular and leave a ten-cent
tip for both of them.

“Good morning,” said Marjorie Ventusa, smiling brightly and thinking of
nothing at all. She put the water glasses on the table. The two women
were frowning at their menus.

“How much extra is a large orange juice?” asked one.

“It’s ten cents more if you take it with the breakfast.”

“All right, I’ll take a double orange juice, some toast and coffee. Do
you have any marmalade?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Well, bring some of that, too.”

The other woman said, “The same for me.” Marjorie Ventusa picked up
their menus. As she was turning to go she saw Robert Holton come into
the restaurant and she was suddenly happy. She smiled at him and he,
seeing her, smiled back. She pointed to one of her tables and he sat
down at it. Quickly she went back to the kitchen to give her orders.
She pushed her hair back from her face and promised herself that she
would get a snood the next day.

Marjorie Ventusa liked Robert Holton. For a year he had been coming
into the restaurant; he always spoke pleasantly to her and they
would joke together. She had never seen him anywhere except in the
restaurant. She knew that he never really noticed her but she was
always glad to see him and she was delighted when he talked to her
and smiled at her; his smile was pleasant and he had nice teeth. She
thought him handsome.

“Good morning, Mr Holton,” she said, putting a glass of water and some
silverware on his table.

“How’re you today, Marjorie? You look perfect.”

“Sure, sure, I do; I’m a real beauty.” Marjorie always felt awkward
with him, as though she couldn’t think of the right words to say. She
was older than he was, too. Marjorie was thirty-seven; she had known a
lot of men and still she was awkward with him.

“What you going to have this morning?” she asked.

“Well....” He drawled the word as he looked at the menu and she had a
strong urge to touch the short dark hairs on the back of his neck. She
tried to think of some excuse to do so. Then she was angry with herself
for having thought of such a thing.

“I guess I’ll have some orange juice and scrambled eggs and bacon.”

“Is that all you going to eat? Why, how you ever going to get big and
strong?”

He laughed. “Not sitting at a desk and eating your cooking.”

“Oh, is that so?” Marjorie Ventusa walked slowly back to the kitchen.
She felt strained as she walked for she could feel he was watching her.
She wished suddenly that her hips weren’t so big and that her legs were
slimmer.

She shouted his order to the cooks, then she took the two secretaries’
breakfasts out to them. They complained bitterly about the size of the
orange juice and one said that it was too sour and the other said that
there were seeds in it.

“I’m sorry,” said Marjorie, “would you like something else?”

They said they would not and acted as if she had grown the oranges
badly and had put seeds in the juice. One of her other tables was full
now and she went and took their order.

Out in the kitchen his breakfast was ready and she put it on her tray.
There were some seeds in the orange juice which she carefully removed
with a spoon.

He was reading his paper when she came back. He didn’t look up as she
arranged the dishes on his table.

“Well, here’s your breakfast,” she said. “You better eat it while it’s
hot.”

“Oh, sure.” Robert Holton folded his paper and laid it on the table.
She watched him as he drank the orange juice.

“Sour, isn’t it?” she asked.

“A little bit, maybe.”

“I’m glad you’re not going to complain. The rest, they all complain all
the time. I get so tired sometimes I could get sick; I get so tired of
listening to them.”

“Just don’t take them seriously. Everybody feels awful in the morning.
You’ve just been awake longer and you feel better than they do, that’s
all.”

Marjorie Ventusa laughed admiringly. “I wouldn’t have ever thought of
that,” she said. “You might be right. Anyway a girl gets pretty tired
of being shouted at all the time like it’s her fault.”

“Well, just relax. I like the food and the service.”

“Thank you,” she said, trying to sound elegant and funny at the same
time.

“When you going to go out dancing with me?” Robert Holton asked,
sawing a piece of bacon in half with a blunt knife.

“I’m pretty busy,” she said; she always said that when he asked her
that question. He would say it because he thought it was funny and she
would answer him as though she thought it was funny too. She wished
that he meant it now. She had always wished that he meant it. “I’m
pretty busy,” she said. “I got so many people asking to go out with me.
You’d have to wait couple of weeks, maybe.”

“I can wait,” he said, smiling at her; smiling the way he would to a
child, she thought suddenly. She watched him eat.

“Marjorie,” said a voice behind her.

“Yes, Mrs Merrin, I’m coming. I’ll be right with you. I was just
cleaning this table.”

Mrs Merrin was tall and stout with a wide loose mouth which she could
make look stern and harsh when she wanted to. She made it look that way
now.

“Marjorie,” she said in a low voice, “you stop your hanging around and
talking to the customers. I tell you I won’t stand for it.”

“I’m sorry, Mrs Merrin. I was just cleaning the table.” Mrs Merrin
smiled warmly at Robert Holton and walked away.

“She’s an awful bitch,” said Marjorie Ventusa.

“What did she say?” asked Robert Holton. “I didn’t hear her.”

“She was just running off at the mouth, that’s all. She thought I was
talking too much to you.”

One of her tables called for a check and she walked over quickly and
put their used plates on her tray. Then she went back to the kitchen.
More orders were ready for her. She loaded her tray and went back to
work.

As she worked she watched Robert Holton. It was twenty minutes past
eight and she knew that he had to be at his office at eight-thirty.
She hoped that he would stay as long as possible. His office was only
a block away and he would be able to stay until eight-thirty. He ate
slowly, she knew, and he would read his paper as he ate.

She hurried back to the kitchen. Two waitresses were talking and
laughing together in a corner. They were young and pretty and would
probably marry in another year and never work again; in another year
Marjorie Ventusa would still be waiting on tables.

She stopped in front of the mirror behind the swinging doors. Mrs
Merrin always said that neatness was an important thing.

Marjorie Ventusa rubbed the kitchen steam from the mirror. Her hair was
back in her face again. She pushed it viciously out of her eyes. She
hated its color. It was pale blonde, a real pale blonde. But because
she was getting older and because she was part Italian everyone thought
that she dyed her hair. She wondered if perhaps she shouldn’t have it
colored black. Her eyebrows were dark, thin and dark, and that made the
color of her hair look even more suspicious.

A sailor she had seen several times during the war had told her that
she had a beautiful figure and she had tried to believe him. She was
too heavy, though. Well, she hadn’t been heavy at that time. At least
not quite so heavy as she was now. She wondered what kind of women
Robert Holton liked.

“Marjorie,” said Mrs Merrin. That was all Mrs Merrin said as she walked
by. Marjorie Ventusa was glad. One day she would lose her temper and
get fired.

The mirror had steamed up again. She took her tray and went out into
the dining room. More customers had come. She put glasses of water
and silverware on their tables and took their orders and gave them
instructions in how to order and how to avoid paying extra for what
they wanted.

Robert Holton was halfway through his breakfast. She looked at the
clock over the kitchen doors. It was twenty-seven minutes after eight
o’clock. She would work very hard now to get her orders taken care of
and then she would have a few minutes to talk to him before he left.
She usually couldn’t talk to him at lunch because he was always with
someone else.

Marjorie Ventusa traveled quickly back and forth from kitchen to dining
room and back again. Her hair was hopelessly out of shape now and she
was perspiring.

Finally her last customer was satisfied for the moment. She wandered
casually over to Robert Holton’s table.

“Breakfast good?” she asked.

“Never better.”

“That don’t make it so good.” They laughed. He was always so polite
with her. That was why she liked him, she thought. He was very kind. He
was handsome, too, but that wasn’t as important as being polite. A lot
of fine people were not handsome.

“What’s in the paper?” she asked. She never quite knew what to talk
about when she was with him.

“Not much. The same old stuff. Election stuff mostly.”

“Seems like there’s always an election.”

“There’re a lot of them.”

“I almost don’t read any newspapers. I don’t seem to get time to read
them. I’ll bet you read a lot of them.”

“I have to. I read all about the market.”

“That’s right, you’re in Wall Street. That must be exciting. Working
there where all those big deals are made.”

“They don’t make them where I am.” He laughed. “I’m just another
worker.”

“I thought you were way up in one of the big houses.”

“Well, sort of a clerk which doesn’t pay much. It’s a good way to
starve.”

“You ought to do something different. Suppose you marry some girl....”

“I’m not getting married for a long time.”

“I suppose,” said Marjorie Ventusa calmly, “that you got some nice
society girl all lined up.”

Robert Holton shook his head. “I haven’t any girl anywhere.”

“Isn’t that like life. All the handsome men don’t have girls and they
wonder why so many of us are old maids.”

“You’re not an old maid yet, Marjorie. By the way, what’s your last
name? As long as I’ve known you I’ve never known your last name.”

“Ventusa.” She spelled it for him.

“Italian name?”

“My father was Italian, my mother was Irish.”

“That’s a good combination. I knew a lot of pretty girls when I was in
Italy.”

“Were you there in the war?”

“I was there over a year.”

“I always wanted to travel. I guess I’d rather travel than do
anything. My father, he used to tell me stories about Italy. He came
from Sicily. Were you ever in Sicily?”

“Yes, I was in Sicily.”

“It’s beautiful, isn’t it?”

“Beautiful.”

“Must be real messed up now.”

“Not too bad. The scenery’s still there.”

“I’m going to go there someday,” said Marjorie Ventusa, knowing that
she never would.

“You’ll like it.”

Mrs Merrin was looking at her and she pretended to be busy at his table.

“Let me get you some more coffee,” she said. She picked up the plates
from his table and put them on her tray. Her arm touched his hand. He
pulled away unconsciously, and she walked back to the kitchen.

She got a cup of coffee for him. Two other orders were ready for her.
She put them on her tray and returned to the dining room.

She noticed a girl was walking over to Robert Holton’s table. She had
seen the girl often before. She worked in Robert Holton’s office.
Occasionally they would have lunch together. She was a pretty girl.
Her hair was dark and her skin white. Her lips were full and painted a
deep red. She had a slim figure and slim legs and her eyes were blue, a
deep vivid blue that Marjorie Ventusa envied. The girl spoke to Robert
Holton. He stood up. Then they both sat down.

Marjorie Ventusa took care of two tables and then she went to Robert
Holton’s table and placed his cup of coffee before him.

“Good morning,” she said to the pretty girl.

“Good morning,” said the pretty girl absently. “I’ll have some
grapefruit juice. That’s all I want. I’m reducing,” she said to Robert
Holton and she patted her slim waist.

“What on earth are you reducing for?”

“You think I look all right this way?” she asked, pretending surprise.

Marjorie Ventusa hurried to the kitchen. She hated this pretty girl.
All day long Robert Holton was with her. Perhaps even at night they
were together. She pushed her blonde hair back out of her face. If
only she had been pretty and young. Of course, she had been young but
she had never been pretty. She was far from old now. They said that if
one wanted something badly enough one would get it. That was foolish;
Marjorie Ventusa had never gotten anything she wanted, except a yellow
satin dress. When she was a child she had wanted a yellow satin dress
and her father had bought her one. The dress was in a box in her closet
now; she had not looked at it in fifteen years. She picked up a glass
of grapefruit juice and put it on her tray.

The pretty girl was laughing when she came back to their table and
Robert Holton was watching her. She wore a gray suit buttoned tightly
across her small breasts.

“Here’s your grapefruit juice.”

“Thank you very much,” said the girl, paying no attention to Marjorie
Ventusa, saying the words mechanically.

The waitress began to clean the table next to Robert Holton’s. She
rubbed the gray damp cloth over the shiny black table-top and she
listened to Robert Holton and the pretty girl as they talked.

“But Caroline” (her name was Caroline then), “I didn’t know you were
expecting me last night.”

“Well, we weren’t really. I just thought you might come on over, that’s
all. We had quite a gang. Jimmy Hammond, he was at Yale about the same
time you were.”

“I went to Harvard.”

“That’s right, you did. Well, you would’ve liked Jimmy Hammond. He was
in the army, too. And there were a whole lot of people around. I just
thought you’d have liked to come.”

“I certainly would’ve but I didn’t remember your inviting me.”

“That’s all right,” said Caroline, drinking her grapefruit juice and
making a face as she did. “God, but this stuff is sour.”

Marjorie Ventusa, having cleaned the shiny black table-top cleaner than
it had ever been before, turned to another table. She was still close
enough to hear what they said.

“What did you do last night, Bobby?” She called him Bobby. Marjorie
Ventusa wondered if she would ever be able to call him that.

“Not a thing. I went home to bed early.”

“Next time I’ll send you an engraved invitation when I want you to come
to the house.”

“You do that. What time’s it getting to be?”

Caroline looked at the clock. “It’s not much after eight-thirty. Let’s
take our time.”

“We don’t want to be too late.”

“You haven’t been around long. Nobody gets there on time. What’re you
bucking for, Mr Holton?”

He grinned at her. Robert Holton had dark blue eyes. Marjorie Ventusa
had never noticed them before. They were beautiful eyes, she thought
suddenly.

One of the waitresses came over to her and said, “Boy, you sure must
like that guy in the corner.”

“What do you mean? What you talking about?”

“Nothing at all. You needn’t get so excited. I was just noticing you
talking to him all the time. I couldn’t help noticing, Marjorie. You
was there so long talking to him.”

“He comes in here a lot and we talk, that’s all. I hope _you_
don’t mind.”

“I don’t mind at all, Marjorie. I was just kidding you.”

Marjorie Ventusa picked up a cup of coffee and went back to the dining
room. The waitress had irritated her. She didn’t want anyone to think
that she would fall for a man at least ten years younger than she
was. Well, perhaps not ten years. Robert Holton could be thirty. The
difference between thirty and thirty-seven was not so great.

She walked over to Robert Holton’s table. They were talking.

“I don’t see what you have against Dick. He’s an awful nice fellow.”

“I don’t have anything against him. He just doesn’t like me. He thinks
I’m trying to get his job.”

“Well, are you?”

Robert Holton smiled. “I don’t want anything; didn’t you know that?”

“Well, aren’t you the saint. You mean you wouldn’t like to take his
job? Not even if it was offered to you?”

“I suppose if it were easier to take a job than refuse it I’d take the
job. I’m easy to please.”

Caroline sighed. “You’re easy to please. I guess that’s what war does
to you.”

“I was always like that. I was like that at college.”

“Just lazy?”

“Just lazy.”

“Good Lord, it’s almost nine! We have to get out of here.”

Robert Holton waved to Marjorie Ventusa. She came over to their table
slowly. She didn’t want him to leave any sooner than he had to.

“Got my check, Marjorie?”

“I’ll get it for you.” She went to the cashier and had his check
totalled for him. Then she brought it back and he paid her, leaving a
ten-cent tip under his water glass.

Caroline stood up and put her gray coat about her shoulders. Robert
Holton picked up his trench coat and slung it over his arm.

“I’ll see you at lunch, Marjorie,” he said.

“See you,” said Marjorie Ventusa and she watched them as they went out
the door into the bright autumn morning.

“Say, Marjorie,” said one of her regular customers, “how about some
more coffee.”

“O.K., O.K.,” she said.

“When are you going to get those tables cleaned?” said Mrs Merrin who
was back in Marjorie Ventusa’s corner. “I wish you’d try to get them
done right after the customers leave. I wish you’d make some effort,
Marjorie.”

“I’m sorry,” said Marjorie Ventusa.

She began to clear Robert Holton’s table.

“What about my coffee?” asked the customer. “When I going to get it?”

“Right away.” Marjorie Ventusa finished cleaning Robert Holton’s table.
Almost sadly she pocketed the ten-cent tip which he had left under the
water glass.




                            _Chapter Three_


The elevator door opened and Caroline Lawson and Robert Holton stepped
out of it and into the New York office of Heywood and Golden, members
of the New York Stock Exchange and other organizations equally sound.

The entrance hall was modern and dignified. The walls were clean and
white and there was a thick carpet on the floor. Two heavy leather
couches furnished the entrance. A dark genteel girl sat behind a
reception desk.

“Good morning, Caroline,” she said in a nasal voice. “Good morning,
Bob.”

“Hello, Ruth,” said Robert Holton, and Caroline Lawson smiled at her.

“Anything new?” asked Robert Holton.

“Not a thing, Bob, not a thing. Everything’s just as dull as ever. Of
course, it’s still early.”

“Sure,” said Caroline, amused at the thought of anything interesting
happening to them, “the day’s just started.”

“Is the boss in yet?” asked Robert Holton. He was terribly afraid
of getting in bad, thought Caroline, looking at him. He was rather
cowardly but nice. Perhaps having been in the war had changed him.
Perhaps he would improve.

Ruth shook her head. “No, he’s not in yet. He hasn’t come in yet. He’s
always late, Mr Murphy is.” Mr Murphy was the head of the Statistical
Section where Robert Holton worked. Caroline was Mr Murphy’s secretary.

“Well, I’m glad,” said Robert Holton.

“You certainly _are_ eager,” said Ruth, looking up at him, her
head slightly to one side: the way that movie actresses looked.

Robert Holton laughed. “I guess I am.”

“And after all you’ve been through, too! Why, if I’d seen what you’ve
seen I wouldn’t worry what nob ... anybody thought.”

“That’s what I used to say,” said Robert Holton.

“Come on, Bob,” said Caroline. “Let’s get back to the salt mine.”

Ruth nodded to them and they walked into a long room. On one side of
the room were the doors of offices; the other side was covered with
tremendous pictures of factories and ships and railroads. The pictures
were Mr Golden’s idea. He wanted to explain to customers the real
meaning of the stocks they were buying. Mr Golden always wanted people
to feel that the stock market was a creative, a productive thing.

Women of all ages sat typing at small desks in the long room. The light
was indirect and modern and very even. One could see that Heywood and
Golden was a well-organized house.

People murmured good mornings to Caroline and Robert Holton as they
walked together between the desks. At the end of the room there was a
glass door behind which were a large blackboard, ticker tape machines,
and men recording the prices of the various stocks.

“Look busy, don’t they?” commented Caroline.

“They certainly do. I wouldn’t have that job for anything.”

“I think it’d be sort of exciting.”

“Too much running around for me. I like to sit still.”

“It takes,” said Caroline, “all kinds to make up a world.”

“Isn’t that lucky?” said Robert Holton and Caroline didn’t know whether
he was laughing at her or not. Sometimes he bothered her. She liked
him. Almost everybody did because he was nice-looking and quiet. He was
weak, though, she thought. She didn’t like a man to be weak. She wanted
someone that she could lean on. Caroline Lawson was one of those pretty
girls who could never bear weak men and yet, by nature, hated those who
were stronger.

They stood and watched the ticker tape machines through the glass door.
A tall white-faced boy was slowly marking figures on the blackboard.
He stood on a small stepladder and as he wrote the figures his left
foot tapped regularly and rhythmically on the top step of the ladder.
Caroline wondered what tune he was making.

“You like to dance, don’t you?” she asked suddenly.

“What? Dance? Sure, I like to dance. Why?”

“Oh, I don’t know. I was just thinking, that’s all. I like to dance a
whole lot. When I was at college we used to have wonderful dances.”

Robert Holton laughed. “That wasn’t so long ago, when you were at
college. Don’t you go out any more?”

“Of course I do. You know I do, all the time, and I’m not trying to get
you to ask me out either.”

He laughed at her and that was all.

Caroline looked at him and tried to guess what he was thinking. He was
probably thinking that she was very pretty and that he would like to
ask her to go out with him. She wouldn’t go out with him, he knew. Not
now, not after she had said these things. Later, perhaps, when they had
forgotten the words she had said. Caroline sighed as she thought of her
own strength and of his weakness.

“Let’s get back to the office,” said Holton.

They walked down a short corridor. At the end of the corridor was the
Statistical room. Here a dozen men and women worked at desks. They
compiled figures for the executives and the customers and everyone else
in the house.

Through a noise of automatic welcomes, Caroline and Robert Holton went
into the office. Most of the desks were on the side of the room away
from the windows. The windowed end of the room was protected by a
railing; behind the railing was Mr Murphy’s desk and at a respectful
distance from his desk was Caroline Lawson’s.

“See you later, Bob,” said Caroline and she opened the door of the
railing and went into the windowed section of the room. She let the
door swing creakily shut and went to her desk. Glancing sideways, she
watched Robert Holton go to his desk at the other end of the office.
Then she sat down.

The desk was neat. A new blotter was in the center. An inkwell, without
ink in it, and a penholder, without a pen in it, held the top of the
blotter down. A slim imitation silver vase sat on one corner of the
desk. Occasionally Mr Murphy would put a flower in the vase and she
would smile at him when he did that and Mr Murphy would wink at her.

One of the two phones on her desk rang. She picked up the receiver.
“Hello?” Someone asked for Mr Murphy. “He isn’t in right now; shall I
have him call you? You’ll call back later? Thank you.” She cleared her
throat, cleared her professional telephone voice away.

She moved the blotter to one end of the desk. Then she lifted the front
of her desk and a typewriter appeared. She ran her fingers over the
keys, professionally, like a pianist before he begins to play.

She opened the left-hand top drawer of the desk. This was her personal
drawer. Here were several compacts in various stages of use. A slightly
crushed box of pale green Kleenex, a carton of cigarettes, and a box of
fairly expensive candy. The lid of the candy box was off and Caroline
Lawson decided that, since her breakfast had been small, a little candy
wouldn’t hurt her. She picked the largest piece and put it in her mouth.

“Good morning, Caroline. How’s the girl?” It was Mr Murphy.

Caroline swallowed quickly. “Fine, fine, Mr Murphy. How’re you today?”

“Me? I’m just fine today. Certainly is a wonderful day today. Makes
you feel like going out in the country somewhere. Out to Long Island
or some place like that. Go some place to get away from the city.” Mr
Murphy sighed. He had spent all his life in the city and he wanted to
go live in the country. He would not like the country, of course, but
then he would never leave the city and it made no difference.

“Look what I brought you,” said Mr Murphy. He pulled a slightly rumpled
white carnation from his buttonhole. “We had a big blowout at the Astor
last night. It was quite a show we had.”

“Thank you,” said Caroline, smiling at him. She smelled the white
flower; a strong odor of cigar smoke spoiled the scent. “Thank you,”
she said again and she put the white flower in the tall vase.

“Any calls? Anything new?”

“You had one call. No message, though. The man said he’d call back
later.”

“Good.” Mr Murphy sat down at his desk.

There was a pile of letters on his desk. Very precisely he cut the
letters open one by one. Caroline watched him with a mixture of
admiration and dislike.

Oliver L. Murphy was a tall man. He was heavy but not in the usual
manner. His arms and legs and neck were long and thin and his hips were
narrow; his stomach and chest, however, were massive. He held himself
erect. His face was red as all Irishmen’s faces are supposed to be. His
eyes and hair were dark and he had a thick curved nose. Mr Murphy’s
clothes fitted him well. They were usually of a somber color and always
correct. His cuffs were beautifully starched.

For five years Caroline Lawson had been his secretary. Her first job
had been as his secretary; her last job, too, she thought to herself:
she would be married soon and that would be the end of typing and
putting cigar-scented flowers in fake silver vases. Caroline Lawson was
not sure whom she would marry but she would certainly get married to
someone soon.

Mr Murphy finished reading his letters.

“Anything important?” asked Caroline.

Mr Murphy shook his head. “Not much of anything. We got one letter here
I ought to answer.”

“I’ll get my pad.” Caroline picked up a lightly ruled pad of paper
from her desk. Then she went over and sat down in a chair beside Mr
Murphy’s desk. She sat close to the window so that the morning sunlight
would warm her. As she sat down bits of dust vibrated up into the
sunlight from her chair seat. The motes of dust danced and glittered
and then slowly sank along the beams of light to the floor.

“I’m ready,” said Caroline Lawson.

Mr Murphy cleared his throat and looked helplessly about him. It was
his usual beginning. Then he picked up the letter he was to answer. He
waited a moment for the words to come to him.

“Dear,” he began. She made the figure for the word. He paused, studying
the ceiling. He began again, “Dear Mr Lachum, In reply to your letter
of the 16th, etc., etc....” He stopped and closed his eyes; this seemed
to help. “I cannot, I fear, agree with you in your analysis of certain
trends now at work ... no, now abroad ... in the financial world.” His
voice became firm and concise, “Although I have the greatest personal
esteem for the opinions of yourself and associates, uh, in re to the
stock market, I must, in this instance, disagree with you, for I am of
the opinion that this is a rising market and will continue to be so.
All statistics at hand ... no, available, point to just that. Hoping to
hear from you again, and so on.” Mr Murphy stopped and opened his eyes.
He looked pleased and exhilarated.

“That’s a very nice letter, Mr Murphy. Knowing Mr Lachum, I think you
were certainly nice to him.”

“Well, it never does to offend people, Caroline. That’s a rule with me.
That’s something I’ve always followed. I wouldn’t be here today if I
hadn’t been that way.” He paused and they both thought of a world where
there was no Mr Murphy because he had offended people.

“All right, let’s hear that letter back.”

Caroline read the letter. Mr Murphy listened, pleased.

“That’s fine,” he said when she had finished. “Type it up please.”

Caroline went back to her desk. The sunlight and the glittering
dust were almost out of the room now. Soon they would turn on the
fluorescent lights over their desks. Caroline sometimes wished that the
morning would last all day.

Caroline put a piece of paper in her typewriter. She started to type;
then she remembered that all letters must be done in triplicate. She
pulled the sheet of paper out of the machine. Wearily, enjoying her
weariness, she arranged more paper in the typewriter.

Her fingers moved swiftly over the keys. She made rhythms as she typed,
as the keys clattered on the white paper.

In a few minutes she was finished.

“Very nice,” said Mr Murphy, looking over her shoulder. “Very nice,
indeed. I’ll sign that now.”

“O.K.” Caroline took the papers out of the typewriter. She removed
the carbon. Mr Murphy signed the letter carefully. During the last
five years Caroline had watched Mr Murphy’s signature change. It was
becoming more original; the upstrokes were stronger and the “M” was
becoming regal.

She blotted his signature. “What’ll I do next?” she asked.

“I expect you’d better get on those reports for Mr Golden. He was
asking for them yesterday.”

“What _does_ he think we are? We were only told to do those
reports last week. That takes a lot of time. I don’t see what he’s
always in such a rush for.”

“Well, you know how some people are,” said Mr Murphy, meaning much more
than he said.

Caroline nodded wisely. Mr Murphy was often opposed to Mr Golden’s
business ideas. Mr Heywood, who had inherited a lot of money and
never bothered much with business, was Mr Murphy’s friend. Mr Golden
was a promoter who had become a partner several years before. The
conservative element of the house stood firmly against him but his hold
over Mr Heywood was equally firm.

“I’ll get to work on it right away,” said Caroline.

“Good, I think I’ll go up to the front office. If there’re any calls
tell them I’ll call back.”

“Yes, Mr Murphy.”

Smoothly Mr Murphy moved across the room. All of his movements were
smooth and swift. He opened the swinging gate that separated him from
his staff. They didn’t look up from their work as he walked between the
desks toward the hall.

Caroline took more paper out of her desk and put it in her typewriter.
She opened a black notebook. Slowly she began to copy. After a minute
or so she stopped. She wasn’t concentrating and she didn’t know what
was wrong.

Caroline Lawson leaned back in her swivel chair and her arms dropped
limply at her sides. The sunlight was gone out of the room and she
could no longer see the dust in the light.

Far away she could hear the sounds of automobile horns blowing, of
newsboy shouts in the street; and, from time to time, their building
would rumble as a train passed underground.

Closer to her were the sounds of the office. The clattering of
typewriters, the constant low buzz of voices; these were the sounds of
her days. Caroline was dissatisfied.

Across the room she could see Robert Holton writing something in a
black book. She pitied him because he seemed to really like what he was
doing. But then it was better than being a soldier: probably anything
was better than that. But then Robert Holton wasn’t a woman. That made
a lot of difference, thought Caroline. He couldn’t be depressed by
things the way she was. Men were never sensitive about such things. She
had a _malaise_. Having thought of this word, she was pleased with
it. The word described her sudden fits of depression.

Robert Holton closed the book on his desk. He looked about him
uncertainly. Then he stood up and walked toward her. He was
presentable, she thought. Certainly better looking than anyone else in
Heywood and Golden, but he was not what she wanted at all. Also, there
was some doubt in her mind that Robert Holton was interested in her.

“How’s it going, Caroline?”

“I’m slowed up.” She sighed loudly and wilted in her chair.

“That’s too bad,” he said. She didn’t answer. She was quiet for a
moment. He watched her and she enjoyed his watching her. Finally he
said, “Murphy’s in a good mood today.”

Caroline nodded. “He’s real happy today. He wants to go out in the
country. He always wants to do that when he’s feeling good.”

“He’s some character,” said Robert Holton. He sat down on the railing.

“It would be nice,” said Caroline thoughtfully, “to go out in the
country; have a picnic maybe.”

“Sure, that would be nice, but you couldn’t do that.”

“No, I guess _you_ couldn’t.” Caroline was contemptuous but
because she was a very pretty and popular girl she didn’t show it. She
was sensitive herself and that was what she wanted in life: a man who
was as sensitive as she, someone who would respond to her moods. She
looked at Robert Holton. He was sitting uneasily on the railing. No,
he could never understand her great sadness. Perhaps no one would ever
understand her. Caroline was sad, for it is a sad thing to be both
pretty and sensitive.

“You’re going out tonight, aren’t you?”

Robert Holton nodded. “I’m going to a cocktail party; I’m going to Mrs
Raymond Stevanson’s.”

“Oh, is that so? You’re really going around in high circles. I guess
I shouldn’t be associating with high society like you.” She had meant
to speak lightly and humorously but somehow the words had come out all
wrong and there was a bitterness in her voice that embarrassed her.

Robert Holton looked surprised; he smiled finally. “Well, it never
hurts to know these people. She was a friend of my mother’s,” he
explained, trying to explain these things, to make himself appear like
her; she hated him for his kindness.

“Those people are O.K., I guess,” said Caroline. She started to say
something about her own family, some improbable but soothing lie,
something to prove to herself that she was the same as Mrs Stevanson
whose picture was so often in the papers. But she said nothing. She
played with the ribbon of her typewriter.

“I hate staying in one place,” said Caroline, after a moment of silence.

“It’s no fun traveling,” said Robert Holton. “Moving around all the
time; that’s what I didn’t like in the army. No, traveling’s pretty
lousy.”

“That kind is, but I mean to go ... well, you know ... where you want
to go, that’s what I mean. I don’t like sitting around here day after
day. I want to go some place.”

He shrugged. “A lot of people do, I guess. Marjorie, you know, the
waitress, she wants to go to Sicily.”

“Well, that’s different. I mean she’s not ... well, you know what I
mean, she’s probably happy doing what she’s doing.”

“I don’t see why,” said Robert Holton. They thought of Marjorie Ventusa
for a moment then they didn’t think of her again.

Robert Holton shifted his position on the railing. Caroline looked
about the familiar room. The older women were typing and using their
adding machines; the younger women were watching Robert Holton; and the
younger men (there were three of them) looked up occasionally to see
what Caroline was doing. She posed a little for them. She didn’t pose
haughtily, though. Caroline was too clever for that. She just looked
girlish and rather innocent. None of them could understand her sadness
and her longing. It pleased her to think how well she hid herself. Not
even Robert Holton, talking to her now, could realize these things.

“No,” said Robert Holton, “no, I want to stay in one place.”

“You don’t want to be doing the same thing all the time, do you?”

“I don’t know, I’d like to make more money.”

“I think you’re crazy,” she said. She watched her fingers as they
tapped lightly on the keys of the typewriter. Her hands weren’t quite
what she wanted them to be. She thought of them as long and slender and
faintly exotic; actually her hands were short and square and not very
clean. The red enamel was beginning to chip off her thumbnails.

“Why’m I crazy? Because I want to make more money?”

“Not because of that, of course. Just because.”

“Oh.”

Robert Holton shifted his position on the railing. Caroline suddenly
didn’t want him to go. Then Richard Kuppelton got up from his desk near
the door and came over to them.

“Why, hello, Dick,” said Caroline.

“Good morning, good morning,” said Dick heartily. He was a very hearty
person and Caroline liked him. He was so different from Robert Holton.
Dick always seemed the same; he acted the same, anyway. Caroline could
almost always tell what he was going to say and that was a lot better
than being around a person who never said the right things. Dick wasn’t
sensitive, however. He and Robert Holton were the same that way but
then Caroline couldn’t have everything.

“How’s every little thing?” asked Dick Kuppelton.

“Fine,” said Robert Holton. Caroline only smiled; she smiled with her
eyes as well as her mouth. It was important to smile that way.

“Been pretty slow today,” said Dick. “Not much business. I think the
market’s falling off.” Someone had told him that, thought Caroline,
delighted with her perception.

“It may be,” said Robert Holton without much interest.

“We should have a big rush soon. I’m doing a report now. Well, not
really a report; I’ve been getting some statistics on aircraft stock
ready for the front office. It’s been some job.” He shook his head to
show the largeness of the job.

“I’ve got a report like that to do, too,” said Caroline.

“Something for Golden?”

“Yes.”

Dick nodded knowingly. “Some report, I bet.”

“It’s certainly long,” said Caroline, pointing to the notebook on her
desk.

Robert Holton got off the railing and stretched. “I better get to
work,” he said. “Murphy might be back soon.” He went back to his desk.

“He’s real eager,” said Dick unpleasantly.

“What? Well, I don’t know about that. He’s sort of funny. He doesn’t
want to get anywhere but he doesn’t want to get in bad. I don’t know;
he’s awful funny.”

“I’ve seen those guys before,” said Dick. “I know that type. They come
in a place and get in good with the top people. Then they get your job.
That’s just what he’s up to.”

Caroline smiled and said nothing. She was pretty and popular and she
couldn’t always, therefore, say what she thought. She knew, though,
that Dick Kuppelton, who had been with Heywood and Golden for six
years, disliked Holton. Mr Murphy had never liked Kuppelton and at the
end of the year changes were always made and Robert Holton might take
Dick’s place. Things were very complicated, thought Caroline.

“I don’t think he’s that smart,” said Caroline.

“I think you’re wrong.” Dick started to straddle the railing, then he
changed his mind and leaned against it. He was a large man. He was
thirty and pink and blond. He wore large rimless glasses which made
his face look clean and blank. He enjoyed what he was doing, thought
Caroline. Everyone enjoyed working except herself.

“I’ve got to do some typing,” said Caroline. She wanted him to go away.

“Certainly; I suppose I’d better be getting back.” He stood up straight
and stretched. “Well, back to work,” he said.

“See you,” said Caroline. Dick was so dependable: you always knew what
to expect.

Caroline coughed. Her cough had a consumptive sound to it which rather
appealed to her. When she was a young girl she had seen a play about a
beautiful woman with white flowers and a cough. The beautiful woman had
been so interesting that Caroline had never forgotten her although she
had forgotten the play. Caroline coughed again, quietly, dramatically.

“How’s that report coming?” Oliver L. Murphy had returned from the
front office.

“Pretty well, Mr Murphy.”

“Had quite a session with Mr Golden.”

“I bet,” said Caroline with sympathy. “I’ll bet he was something.”

“Well, I handled him O.K. today. He’s not so hard to get along with. Of
course, he’s got some queer ideas. Those people often have.”

“Isn’t that the truth.” Caroline arranged the paper in her typewriter.
Mr Murphy leaned over and smelled the carnation in the imitation silver
vase.

“Smells nice, don’t it?”

“It certainly does, Mr Murphy.” She smiled. Mr Murphy went back to
his desk and Caroline typed. Several times as she worked she coughed,
quietly, almost to herself.




                            _Chapter Four_


Richard Kuppelton left Caroline reluctantly. He liked her because she
was pretty and much more sensible than the other pretty girls he had
known.

He stopped at his desk. It was a dull olive color. His different books
of statistics were piled neatly on one corner; notebooks and papers
were scattered over the top and it looked as if he were busy.

Kuppelton decided not to work, not just now. From the top drawer of
his desk he took a magazine. It had a vivid cover of a large-breasted
young woman being carried into a machine by an octopus. He enjoyed this
magazine’s stories very much.

He slipped the magazine under his arm, the cover toward his side; and
then, busily, he left the room for the lavatory.

There was something cozy about a lavatory, he thought as he opened the
door marked “Men.” No one was inside and he would be able to sing.
The room was large, white and very clean. The urinals, four of them,
stood polished and shining, like soldiers on guard. A thin waterfall
constantly descended down their white enamel surfaces; the smell of
disinfectant was in the air, but not too strongly.

Richard Kuppelton glanced at himself quickly in one of the four mirrors
which shone over the four wash basins. Then he walked to one of the
four black-doored stalls. He chose the one nearest the wall. There was
strategy in his choice as well as habit, for the light was over this
stall.

With the feeling of having come home after a long journey, Richard
Kuppelton opened the black door and stepped inside. Then he closed the
door and locked it. He was completely alone now; no one could disturb
him and he was safe.

Deliberately he hung up his coat and then, after some preparation, he
descended with a sigh upon the cool smooth seat. He relaxed happily.

On the subway he had started a story called “The Mad Moon Maidens”;
unfortunately, it had been a little dull and he had decided not
to finish it. He thumbed through the rough pages of his magazine.
Grotesque black and white drawings decorated the pages. There were
monsters and ghouls, beautiful women (usually screaming) and lean young
men with pongee hats. The title “Satanic Underworld” appealed to him
and he started to read.

After only a few minutes, however, he found himself studying the tile
floor. Black and white tile in neat one-two-three pattern across the
floor; he liked things that were black or white. The pattern was
familiar to him and gave him a further feeling of being home.

Great ideas came to Richard Kuppelton enthroned. Here in this retreat
the entire world assumed a pattern of great simplicity. All problems
could be rendered answerable and in this world he was sovereign. The
lavatory was his study. He thought of Robert Holton: the person who
currently threatened his career.

Robert Holton was deceitful; he knew that. On the surface he appeared
simple and a little shy but Kuppelton knew differently. Little things
that the others had not noticed he noticed. For instance, Holton
was always trying to get friendly with Mr Murphy. He always called
him “sir”; treated him as if he were a colonel or something in the
army. That was another thing: the army. Holton had been a soldier and
Kuppelton had not. Most of the others in the office had not been in
the war either. Both Mr Heywood and Mr Golden had declared that they
would do all that they could for the veteran. So far this hadn’t been
very much, but still it was their intention. Richard Kuppelton wished
suddenly that he could stay forever in this shiny black stall with the
tile floor.

There was a noise in the lavatory. Someone had come in. Footsteps
clattered on the floor. The door to the stall next to his opened and
someone sat down.

He wondered who it was. The person wore plain brown shoes: he could
see them through the foot-high space beneath the stall partition.
This person also wore brown trousers. Richard Kuppelton thought for a
moment, strained to remember who it could be. Then he remembered.

“Hello, Bob,” said Richard Kuppelton.

“What? That you, Dick?”

“The same.”

“You catching up on your reading?”

Richard Kuppelton closed his magazine guiltily. “No, no. Just nature.”

“It’s a good place to think.”

“Well, I suppose it is.”

“What’s wrong with Caroline today?” asked Robert Holton.

“I haven’t the slightest idea. I didn’t notice anything wrong with her,
did you?”

“Yes, I thought she was sort of irritable.”

“I didn’t notice it.” Richard Kuppelton sighed. He was beginning to
get uncomfortable, sitting on the hard seat. He was, also, a little
surprised that Holton was as aware of Caroline as this. “Caroline’s a
lot of fun,” he said.

“Yes.”

“She’s a lot of fun to go out on a party with. She can be real funny.”

“I suppose so.”

“You ever go out with her?”

“Not really.”

“What do you mean?”

“I never went to a party with her. We had dinner once.”

“She didn’t want to go dancing?”

“No.”

“That’s funny.” Richard Kuppelton tried to remember whether he had ever
taken Caroline out and they had not danced. No, they had always gone to
a dance. He wondered whether she liked Robert Holton better than him.
This was a new thought and even more unpleasant than the suspicion that
Robert Holton was trying to get his job. “She just likes to talk?”

“Yes, I guess everybody does.”

“That’s right, I guess.” Richard Kuppelton studied Holton’s plain tan
shoes gloomily. One of the things he could not understand was why
Robert Holton had come to work in this office. It was rumored that he
was a friend of Mr Heywood’s but no one had ever been able to prove
that. He had gone to Harvard before the war and to Richard Kuppelton
that was the most important thing about him. It was also suspicious;
he could not understand why a person with that education would do
this job in Heywood and Golden unless--and Richard Kuppelton became
gloomier--unless he were to be promoted over everyone.

“Looks like there’ll be a lot of changes after the first,” said
Kuppelton.

“They tell me there usually are.”

“I suppose you want to end up in the other office, being one of the
contact people.”

“I don’t care much. Whatever they want to do. I’d like to move up, of
course.”

“We all would.”

Robert Holton mumbled something and stood up. Kuppelton watched the tan
shoes as they moved about the stall. There was a swirling of water and
Robert Holton left the lavatory, whistling.

Richard Kuppelton studied the tile again. It seemed, somehow, less
comforting, less private since Holton had been here. He tried to read
again but “Satanic Underworld” had lost its attraction. The seat was
becoming harder every minute and he would have to leave soon.

Then he remembered that the acoustics were unusually good in this
lavatory. In a low voice he sang an Irish ballad which he had learned
in school. His voice came to him pure and vibrant and like no other
voice that had ever sung. He finished with a low note, although,
strictly speaking, the ballad called for a high note. He sang a popular
song next. It was not as great a success as the first because he only
knew the chorus. The words that he made up, however, were quite good
enough.

At last, his songs finished, Richard Kuppelton stood up. He ached
slightly from the strain of sitting on the narrow seat. Deliberately he
arranged his trousers, deploring slightly the heaviness of his waist as
he did.

The sound of swirling water was in his ears as he crossed the lavatory
to the wash basin. Deliberately--he was a deliberate person--he washed
his hands. He dried his hands on a paper towel and then, like a king
abdicating, he moved slowly but deliberately to the door. With a sigh
Richard Kuppelton left the lavatory.

The office had not changed. Mr Murphy was sitting behind his railing,
smoking a cigar and reading a letter. Caroline was typing. Robert
Holton was copying a row of figures into his notebook. The other men
and women in the office were working busily.

Richard Kuppelton sat down at his desk. He enjoyed the sensation of
being a part of this great house. Neatly he arranged his books of
tables and statistics across the top of his desk. The various books
were open at aircraft stock. His statistics would form the basis of a
report which would be used in an overall survey of aircraft stock to be
used by the front office. His responsibilities were heavy.

He took his fountain pen out of his pocket. It was leaking a little and
he had to handle it carefully. Slowly, with pleasure, he copied the
figures from the books. He wrote the numbers carefully, making them
round and legible. When he had finished copying all his numbers they
would be typed up by one of the stenographers in the office.

A tall white-faced boy in a blue suit came into the room. He went to
Richard Kuppelton's desk and put some papers on it.

“Good morning, Jim,” said Kuppelton heartily. “How’s the boy?”

“Fine. I think Golden’s coming this way.”

“Really? Wonder what he wants.”

“Hard to say. He always wants something.”

“That’s his privilege,” said Kuppelton righteously.

“I suppose so,” said Jim.

The white-faced boy went on to the next desk, handing out letters and
inter-office memoranda.

Richard Kuppelton put his fountain pen down carefully. There were
several letters for him. He opened one of them and started to read.

He had read only a few lines when Mr Golden came into the office.
Even without looking up from his letter Richard Kuppelton could have
told that someone from the front office had arrived. The typewriters
clattered more loudly. The usual low buzz of voices died away, and he
could hear Mr Murphy’s swivel chair being pushed back from his desk as
he stood up to welcome the visitor from the front office. Kuppelton put
his letter under the blotter and then he looked up casually.

Benjamin Franklin Golden stood behind Mr Murphy’s railing. He stood
very erect, his eyes moving from desk to desk as he studied the office.
He was a short man and plump. His eyes were small and black and shiny.
Mr Golden had iron-gray hair which he allowed to grow a little longer
than necessary. He was proud to have kept his hair. He had a small nose
and a rather foolish little mouth and he looked more like a South
American or Italian or something like that, thought Kuppelton.

He pretended to write figures in his notebook, while he listened
carefully to what Mr Golden was saying to Mr Murphy.

“Everything all right here, Murphy?” Mr Golden had a high thin voice.

“Yes, sir, we’re getting your reports out. I’ll have the special one
for you this afternoon.”

“That’s good. I really need that report. That’s an important one. Some
of our big steel clients are interested in it. I know you’ve done a
good job on it.” There was almost a threat in his voice. It was well
known that the two did not like each other.

“Well, I’ve got our best girl, I’ve got Caroline here typing it.” He
waved at Caroline who looked up and smiled at Mr Golden who smiled back
at her. Richard Kuppelton wondered what Mrs Golden was like.

“I’m sure she’ll do a good job. How’s that aircraft stock report
coming?”

“Kuppelton’s doing it.” Mr Murphy pointed to him.

Mr Golden nodded. “I’ll be interested to see it.” Richard Kuppelton
copied figures quickly.

“Should be a good survey,” said Mr Murphy. “Is there going to be a
board meeting this morning? You said they hadn’t decided earlier.”

“Oh, yes, I almost forgot; there’ll be a meeting at eleven-thirty.” Mr
Golden had an irritatingly brusque manner.

“Fine,” said Mr Murphy and he made a note of it on the pad on his desk.

Mr Golden didn’t seem to want to go. He looked around the room again.
He looked at Robert Holton and said something to Mr Murphy which
Kuppelton couldn’t hear. Mr Murphy smiled and nodded.

Mr Golden finally opened the door of the railing. “See you at the
meeting, Murphy.”

“Yes, sir.”

Mr Golden hurried out of the office. There was an immediate change
in the sounds of the room after he had left. The hum of voices began
again. Richard Kuppelton put down his fountain pen.

Caroline and Mr Murphy were talking together and laughing. Robert
Holton was still working quietly at his desk. The women of the office
talked about Mr Golden in low voices.

Richard Kuppelton wondered what Mr Golden had said to Mr Murphy about
Robert Holton. He looked at Robert Holton with dislike.

“O.K.,” said Kuppelton, “Mr Golden’s gone, you can stop working.”

Robert Holton put down his notebook and smiled. “It doesn’t hurt,” he
said. “It doesn’t hurt to look busy.”

“Oh, no, I wasn’t meaning to criticize.”

“I didn’t think you were. Did you hear what they were talking about?”

This was malicious, Richard Kuppelton knew; it would have been very
hard for Holton not to have heard. “Oh, they were just talking about
reports.”

“That’s what I guessed.” He started to work again.

“You live uptown, don’t you?” remarked Kuppelton.

“Yes. I’ve got a room in a hotel.”

“That’s funny, I thought you lived with your family or something. I
thought Caroline said something about it.”

“My father used to live here. He lives in Boston now. He used to work
here but he retired when I got out of the army.”

Richard Kuppelton nodded. “That’s right, I remember your telling me
that once. Me, I live with all my family in Queens. We all live there.
I wish sometimes that I lived alone.”

“It’s not much fun, living alone,” said Robert Holton.

“Think you’ll get married soon?”

“I don’t think so.”

“I think _I_ might,” said Richard Kuppelton weightily; he had no
one in mind, though; except possibly Caroline.

“I guess it’s a good idea if you’ve got the right person,” said Robert
Holton.

“That’s very true.” They thought of this a moment. Each thought of it
seriously and each regarded it distantly. Richard Kuppelton had no real
desire to be married. He supposed that Robert Holton felt the same.

“I wonder,” said Kuppelton subtly, “what the conference is going to
be about this afternoon. I wonder if it’s about promotions in the
departments.”

“I haven’t any idea.”

“Since the war, seniority doesn’t make much difference.”

“I thought it did.”

Kuppelton shook his head, convinced of Holton’s insincerity. For weeks
now everyone had discussed the new policy and everyone had watched the
veterans in the different offices, especially Holton; it was expected
that they would all be promoted: in any event Holton would be.

“No, it doesn’t make a bit of difference.”

Robert Holton smiled. He had small white teeth and an agreeable smile
which Kuppelton resented. “That’s good news for me. I haven’t been here
very long you know.”

“Oh, yes, I know,” and Kuppelton laughed loudly to show that he was
friendly and that it made no difference to him who was promoted.

He glanced toward the windows. Mr Murphy caught his eye and motioned to
him. Quickly Richard Kuppelton got to his feet and walked across the
room to the railing. He was careful not to let the gate slam when he
came into Mr Murphy’s presence.

“Yes, sir?”

“I just wanted to check with you on that aircraft stock report. I just
wanted to make sure it was coming along well.”

“I’ve been working on it right along, Mr Murphy. They’ll start typing
it up tomorrow.”

Murphy compressed his lips and nodded slowly. “Mr Golden was asking for
it. I wanted to be sure, Dick.”

Kuppelton was suddenly glad that Mr Murphy had called him by his first
name. He did this only when he was well pleased or when he wanted
something.

“It’s been quite a job getting those things together but I finally ...
got them together.”

“I know how it is. How’s your family these days?”

“They’re pretty well. My mother’s been better. Her legs don’t bother
her so much now.”

“That’s good. Arthritis is pretty bad. I had a grandmother who had it
once.”

“It’s pretty bad,” agreed Richard Kuppelton.

They both paused and wondered what to say next. Kuppelton began to
edge toward the gate. Murphy stood up. “Let me see that thing as soon
as you get it done.”

“I certainly will.”

Mr Murphy turned to Caroline who was typing at her desk. “I’m going to
be in conference for a while,” he said. “Take care of the calls, will
you?”

“Yes, Mr Murphy.”

“Big conference?” asked Kuppelton when Murphy had gone.

“I don’t know,” said Caroline and she stopped typing. “They were
talking about it. Something to do with policy, I think.”

Caroline got up from her desk and stretched. She had nice slim legs,
Kuppelton noticed. He wondered if his mother would like her. It was
important to him to have his mother like his future wife--if he ever
had one. She had been wonderful about the other girls he had liked but
somehow they had never been quite what she thought his wife should be.
He was her favorite son and he could not disappoint her, naturally.

“I guess that leaves me out,” he said wearily, hoping she would give
him some good news.

“Well, I wouldn’t worry too much,” she said, a little coldly he
thought, “you’ve got a good job now.”

“Well, you’re right about that,” he said emphatically.

“Oh, I know I am. Bob’s the fair-haired boy these days,” she added.

“I expect he is.”

Caroline walked to the window and looked down at the crowded street.
“There really are a lot of people in this town,” she said in a distant
voice.

“There sure are.”

“Do you ever wonder about all those people ... down there?”

This was the sort of talk that made Richard Kuppelton nervous. He hated
it when people started asking him vague questions to which there were
no sensible answers. “No, I can’t say that I do.”

She turned around and looked at him then, looked at him rather sadly,
he thought. “I’ve got work to do,” was all she said.

“See you, Caroline.”

Robert Holton was leaning back in his chair.

“Pretty dull, isn’t it?” commented Dick.

“The army was a lot duller.”

“I thought that was one thing that it wasn’t ... dull.”

Robert Holton chuckled. “This is a lot better.”

“Don’t you miss moving around?”

He paused before he replied and Kuppelton wondered what the truth
really was; however, Robert Holton only said, “No, no, I like staying
in one place.”

Richard Kuppelton turned back to his books of figures. He wondered
helplessly, as he wrote, how anyone could be as deceitful as Robert
Holton. It was obvious to him that Holton would get the job he was
to have gotten and he certainly could not get this job without being
deceitful. Richard Kuppelton was worried about this. He was also
worried because he found himself hating Robert Holton and his mother
would never have approved of that.




                            _Chapter Five_


The ulcer was the most important thing.

After the ulcer his wife, and then his job, and finally his children.
These were Mr Murphy’s interests. At the moment the ulcer was more
important to him than all the others together.

Ever since Mr Murphy could remember, he had had pains in his stomach.
Not really bad pains: just unpleasant sensations. In recent years this
had gotten worse. A month before, a doctor examined him and said that
he had an ulcer. The doctor was very serious and there was talk of
further tests. Then Mr Murphy read a picture magazine article on cancer.

He did not suspect cancer: he knew. The doctor, although he had
been rather grave, had said nothing about cancer, but Mr Murphy was
confident he had it. He had tried to do everything right, to cure
himself with bicarbonate of soda and other medicines but the pains not
only didn’t go away but they got worse when he thought about them.

He pushed his fist into his stomach for a moment and felt the pain
under his fingers. He cursed himself for having gone to the party the
night before.

As he walked through his office he wished that he were home in bed. It
would have been harder, of course, to stay home, because his wife was
not very good with an illness. She had a tendency to become hysterical
if she had to do anything unusual. No, it was better to be here at the
office. To be here even if he was dying. This last thought made him
uncomfortable and he put it out of his mind.

He looked at his watch--eleven-fifteen. The meeting would begin soon.
Mr Golden insisted that all meetings begin on time.

Mr Murphy left his office. As he walked through the rooms he was
pleased to have everyone speak to him politely. He was a person of
importance here and he had become this all by himself with no help from
anyone; practically no help.

The executive offices were larger and better decorated than the other
offices. There were several uniform rooms where the vice-presidents
(they used to be partners but Mr Golden had changed that) sat at big
desks and received clients and dictated letters and did other things.
Then there was the anteroom. This was a small room with red leather
couches, a receptionist, some modern lamps and two portraits on the
walls. These paintings were of Mr Heywood and Mr Golden. Beyond the
anteroom was the boardroom.

The receptionist smiled at Mr Murphy. He smiled back at her and sat
down in one of the red leather couches. Two minor vice-presidents were
also seated and waiting. They greeted him soberly.

“Nice morning,” said the younger of the vice-presidents; he had been a
lieutenant commander in the navy.

“Certainly is,” said Mr Murphy.

“I understood we’re in for a cold winter,” commented the older of the
two vice-presidents; he had been a commander in the navy.

“Nothing like a real old-fashioned Christmas,” said Mr Murphy in a
smooth low voice. He was conscious of a difference in their voices. His
own voice sounded rough to him while their voices were always smooth
and almost British. He had noticed these differences before but there
was nothing much he could do about them. In the front office he always
felt less important because of this difference, and because of this and
other things, too, he was made to feel an outsider.

The vice-presidents then talked in their cultured near-British voices
about a certain college football game. Mr Murphy lay back in his red
couch and wondered if perhaps he should drink more milk. That was good
for ulcers; but nothing was good for cancer. He shuddered.

A few more vice-presidents and section heads came into the anteroom.
They talked and laughed together and Oliver L. Murphy talked and
laughed with them.

There was a buzz and everyone stopped talking. The receptionist looked
up from her desk. “They’re ready,” she said.

The men walked into the boardroom of Heywood and Golden.

A long room, with indirect lighting, thick carpets, and a long table
with armchairs around it: this was the boardroom. On the walls were
charts of stocks and trends.

Mr Heywood was sitting at one end of the table and Mr Golden was
sitting at the other end of the table. Murphy sat down on the left of
Mr Heywood. This was his usual seat.

“Hello, Oliver,” said Mr Heywood cheerily.

“Hello, Mr Heywood.” Murphy was suddenly glad, glad that Mr Heywood
had called him by his first name; he did this only when he was
well-pleased, or wanted something.

Oliver L. Murphy leaned back in his leather armchair. Mr Heywood sat
rather limply in his own chair at the head of the table. He waited for
the others to be seated.

Lawrence Heywood was a gentleman. He had a large estate in Maryland and
he collected prints; he had had three wives and a number of children
and, generally, he had managed to do everything in a large but tasteful
manner.

He was a tall man in his late forties. Completely bald, his neat round
head shone pinkly under the indirect lights. His face was smooth and
neat and looked as if he had never worried in his life. His voice was
not near-British like his vice-presidents: it was British. He had gone
to school in Massachusetts which explained a lot of it, thought Murphy.

Mr Heywood did everything properly. He had inherited a lot of money. It
seemed as if every year a new relative would die and leave more money
to him. His three wives had all been beautiful and that was another
thing to be said for him--he knew how to choose women. Mr Murphy
wondered what it would be like to marry a beautiful woman.

“How’s that new man in your office?” asked Mr Heywood suddenly.

“You mean Holton? He’s doing very well.”

“I’m glad to hear it. We have a mutual friend,” and Mr Heywood laughed
gently at the thought.

“Is that right? He’s got a good background, I guess,” said Murphy.

“I expect so. I used to know his mother. She was a very attractive
woman twenty years ago. She married ...” Mr Heywood decided not to
reminisce in front of Murphy.

“He’s worked in my section, in the office, just fine.”

“That’s good. I don’t know him myself but I have some plans for him.
We’re going to the same party tonight.” Mr Heywood laughed gently
again. “Perhaps we’ll get to know each other. It’s so hard ever getting
to know employees in the office,” sighed Mr Heywood. “I rather wish
there weren’t so many of them sometimes.”

“I know just how it is.”

“We going to call this meeting together?” It was Mr Golden’s high voice
from the other end of the table.

“Certainly, Ben,” said Mr Heywood. “We’ll start right now.” He picked
up a black ebony gavel and tapped lightly, apologetically with it. The
men stopped talking. “Now, let’s see,” began Mr Heywood.

“The Steel account, that’s the big thing we’re going to talk about,”
said Mr Golden.

“That’s right.” Mr Heywood sounded bored. “That’s right. Well,
gentlemen, it seems that we have a problem.”

Mr Murphy relaxed in his chair. Mr Heywood’s voice, gentle and
cultured, came to him soothingly. The Steel account was of no interest
to Mr Murphy; in fact, these conferences were generally of no interest
to him. He was just there to talk about Statistics.

He played with papers in front of him. The voice of Mr Heywood flowed
about him. He was lost in a slow current of polite vowels. The pain in
his stomach was, for the time, gone.

Mr Heywood spoke of the market, of stocks and shares, of the state of
the Union. He spoke convincingly because his manner was convincing
and, also, because his ideas and facts had been given him by many
clever men.

Mr Golden sat at his end of the table and listened. He sat there very
straight, his little mouth set in a soft line of pseudo-firmness. His
small hands drummed on the table and his eyes glanced about the room.
His eyes were always in motion. The fear of a thousand years was in Mr
Golden’s eyes.

From time to time he interrupted. Mr Heywood would pause and listen;
then, when the other had finished, he would continue in his gentle
voice to tell the others what clever men had told him about Steel, and
the men, whose livings depended upon him, listened respectfully to
their ideas.

Mr Murphy observed these things as he sat in his chair. He felt
less important in these conferences but he did feel secure. Here in
the boardroom he felt himself to be a part of something large and
opulent--of American Business. This thought was comforting as well
as sobering. There was no security in the world to equal that of
belonging. It made no difference to what one belonged just as long as
one was a part of something big and secure. And what, Oliver Murphy
asked himself, could be bigger or more secure than Business? He saw
these things clearly because he had a philosopher’s mind and the Celt’s
ability to envisage life in a clear perspective. He could, he knew, see
the trees as well as the forest. That was what made him different from
the others. They felt, perhaps, that they belonged, but he _knew_.

Then the ulcer began to bother him.

He no longer was conscious of Mr Heywood’s voice. The only thing of
importance now was the dull pain in his stomach. He moved uneasily in
his chair. He pushed a hand into his stomach. This helped a little.
The pain shifted slightly. He followed it with his hand, his fingers
pressing gently into the pain.

“We’ll want complete figures on the rise and fall of Arizona Zinc
during the past five years.”

This was said by Mr Heywood. It registered in Mr Murphy’s mind but he
didn’t respond for a moment.

“You’ll have those figures for us next meeting, won’t you?” Heywood
asked, irritation in his voice.

“Certainly, Mr Heywood,” said Murphy. He sat up straight and Mr Heywood
nodded to him and then continued to talk.

Oliver Murphy listened carefully to everything said. He was beginning
to sweat from the pain and the fear (more fear than pain, he told
himself) but still he strained to hear every word and, slowly, as he
listened, magic took place and the pain went away.

At last, when certain decisions had been made, Mr Heywood adjourned the
meeting.

Murphy stood up. He felt better now. He wondered if perhaps he might
not be mistaken about the cancer.

“Oh, Murphy.”

“Yes, Mr Heywood?”

“That fellow in your office, that Holton, you think he’s quite
efficient?”

“I do.”

“I wonder,” said Mr Heywood hesitantly, “I wonder how he might work out
as one of our customers’ men. Dealing with the public, all that sort of
thing.”

“He’d probably do that very well.”

“You could afford to lose him?”

“Oh, yes, I think so.”

“I wish,” said Mr Heywood petulantly, “that I knew him better. It’s
terrible having so little contact with the office people.”

“I could send him in to see you.”

“Good Lord, no! I wouldn’t know what to say. I’ll wait and see him
tonight at Mrs Stevanson’s.”

“When do you think you’ll change him over?”

“Oh, I don’t know. If I think he has the suitable, ah, temperament, we
might change him this week.”

“I know he’ll be really tickled to hear this.”

“I expect so.”

“How is Mrs Heywood?” asked Murphy politely.

“She’s fine, thank you,” said Mr Heywood blankly. Trouble, decided
Murphy. The third Mrs Heywood seemed to be following the previous Mrs
Heywoods.

“Well ...” said Murphy and he mumbled words to himself as he walked
toward the door. Mr Heywood stared vacantly at him as he left.

Mr Murphy felt well when he was in motion. Walking with great dignity
from office to office, conscious of the eyes of others upon him, was
good for him. Aware of being a symbol of success he forgot his pains
and some of his worries.

As he went into the Statistical office he could feel the atmosphere
change. The clerks and typists became busy.

Mr Murphy went to his desk. “Any calls?” he asked.

Caroline shook her head. When she shook, her breasts quivered slightly.
Mr Murphy noticed this and his stomach constricted with pain. Emotion
was bad for him, according to the doctors. He looked away and tried to
think of something else.

“No, there weren’t any calls. Some memorandums came in from the other
sections but that was all.”

“Any letters?” He thought of his family.

“Yes.” Caroline sounded surprised. “Right there on your desk. Right
where I always put them.”

“Oh, yes.” Mr Murphy sat down at his desk and looked at the pile of
neat businesslike envelopes. He had no desire to open them.

Caroline typed rhythmically at her desk.

“Say, Caroline....”

She stopped and looked at him.

“Tell Holton to step over here, will you?”

“Sure, Mr Murphy.” She got up and went through the gate and out into
the office. He watched her legs as she walked determinedly to the other
end of the room. He was almost pleased to feel the pain come flooding
into his stomach. That would teach his stomach, he thought viciously.

The gate creaked and Robert Holton stood before him.

“You want to see me, sir?”

“Yes, yes, Holton. Sit down here. Over here on my left.”

Robert Holton sat down and looked expectant. Mr Murphy wondered for
a moment why he had asked to see Holton. Then he remembered what Mr
Heywood had said.

“How’s everything coming, Holton?”

“Just fine, Mr Murphy.”

“Well, that’s good. Things _have_ been going pretty well here. But
I suppose you find things pretty dull after the army?”

“No, no. I like this sort of work. I had enough moving around.”

“I should think so. Well, that’s what most of us want, I guess,” said
Mr Murphy. “We want to settle down. A lot of people say they don’t like
routine but I think everybody does. It’s an important thing.”

“Yes, sir. I think it is.”

“There is,” said Mr Murphy, shutting his eyes for a moment to give the
illusion of pondering, “there is security in working for a big house
like Heywood and Golden.” He opened his eyes and looked directly at
Holton. “Don’t you feel that’s true?”

“Yes, I hope so.”

“Yes, it’s true.” Mr Murphy sighed and thought about going out to the
country for a rest. A place that would have neither telephones nor
mosquitoes. Most places had one or the other.

He looked at Robert Holton and wondered what he was thinking. He seemed
a likeable young man. He was quiet and reserved and didn’t seem too
aggressive. In fact that was probably a fault that Mr Murphy had not
thought of. Holton was not a go-getter. He might lack initiative. That
was why he was quiet and reserved. Or, as Mr Murphy finally thought,
that might be a reason for his reserve.

“Tell me, Holton,” said Murphy, “have you had any ideas about, ah,
your place here? I mean, what you would like to do. Naturally you
wouldn’t be interested in staying here, in this department. With your
education....” He permitted his voice to fade.

“No, I haven’t had any ideas; in fact, I haven’t thought too much about
it. You see this is all pretty different from what it was like where I
was in the army. I don’t suppose I’m quite used to the idea ... well,
you know....”

“I think I do. You would like to work in another department perhaps?”

Robert Holton looked at him. Mr Murphy could not tell what he was
thinking for his face was relaxed and calm. “Well,” said Holton, “I
don’t know. I don’t want to be out of my depth. I’d like to make more
money. I like the idea of buying and selling stocks. I like that idea
very much. In fact, that’s one of the reasons I came here.”

“Of course, there’s a lot of work to knowing about stocks and bonds.
You realize all the work that’s involved.”

“Yes.”

“Perhaps a place will be found for you in that department. It’s hard to
say, though. With your, ah, background it shouldn’t be too hard. That
is, if you have the _stuff_.”

“I hope so.”

“Good.” Mr Murphy watched Caroline typing. “I understand,” said Mr
Murphy finally in a changed voice, “that you’re going out tonight.”

Robert Holton looked surprised. “What do you mean?”

“Mr Heywood said you and he were going to the same party.”

Holton smiled. “That’s right, I’d forgotten. Mrs Stevanson’s giving a
cocktail party. I guess that’s what he means.”

“It won’t hurt to be nice to him there,” said Mr Murphy with a laugh.

“No, I don’t suppose so.”

Mr Murphy looked at Holton and wondered what would become of him. If he
had more initiative he might be a wealthy man because of his background
(the important thing was background), but he would probably not go
very far. He might not even go as far as Mr Murphy had and Mr Murphy
had been a success without background. Robert Holton didn’t look as
though he cared to be a success.

“Well, don’t let your night life interfere with business,” said Mr
Murphy lightly.

“No,” said Holton rising, “I won’t.”

With a nod Mr Murphy dismissed him.

Mr Murphy watched Caroline absently as she typed. Her hair was rather
long. It must be a nuisance to help her into a coat, he thought
suddenly. That was something he hated to do. Whenever he helped a woman
into a coat there was, first, a certain struggle to get her arms into
the sleeves. Some women were better than others at this. And then,
second, there was the problem of hair. If the woman had long hair it
was inevitably caught inside the coat. This meant that her first motion
was usually to free her hair and that involved a wild freeing and
flinging of the hair which for anyone still posted behind her meant
running a risk of becoming entangled. Mr Murphy wondered about these
problems as he looked at Caroline’s long dark hair.

He had started to work on his letters (the ones in the business
envelopes) when Richard Kuppelton appeared.

“Yes?”

“I’ve got the first part of that report here, the one on aircraft,”
said Kuppelton.

“Yes?” Mr Murphy made himself sound cold and official.

“Well, I wondered if you cared to look at them ... what I’ve done so
far, I mean.”

Mr Murphy looked at him for a moment without speaking. When Mr Murphy
had first come to work for Heywood and Golden his then immediate boss
had impressed him greatly by just looking at him for several seconds
at a time without speaking. Mr Murphy had adopted the mannerism and
over the years had improved it until now he could be very frightening.
He was that way now.

“You want me to do it for you?” he asked finally.

“No ... no, sir, I didn’t mean that. I just thought you would like to
see what I got done.” Kuppelton was uncomfortable and Mr Murphy decided
that he had done enough.

“Why, I’d be glad to look at it,” he said.

Kuppelton brightened. “Thank you. I only wanted you to see the form I
was using here. That was all. I’m making my conclusions in a slightly
different way from usual and I thought....”

“Yes, I’ll take a look at it.”

Kuppelton put a pile of papers down on Mr Murphy’s desk.

Mr Murphy nodded at him and Kuppelton left quickly. Mr Murphy felt much
better after exercising his power. Poor Kuppelton was a good man in an
office but he would never go very far because he didn’t have assurance.
He would be promoted after the first of the year if Holton were moved
out. That would make Kuppelton happy, which was a good thing. It
wasn’t bad, thought Mr Murphy, to have contented people about you in a
discontented world. He relaxed in his chair and then the pains started
again.

This time the ache was about an inch below his belt and slightly toward
the left (his appendix was on the right and, besides, his appendix was
in good shape). The pain began to move toward the center. Quickly he
pressed his fingers into the pain.

His heart beat rapidly and sweat formed on his face. If the pain
didn’t go away by the count of ten he would get up and take the special
medicine his doctor had given him.

Frightened, Mr Murphy counted and the pain, not subject to this magic,
did not go away.




                            _Chapter Six_


“It’s twelve o’clock,” Caroline said to Mr Murphy. “I think I’ll go out
to lunch, if that’s O.K.”

“Yes, yes, Caroline.”

She thought he looked rather pale. She was about to ask him how he felt
but she stopped herself, remembering how he disliked talking about his
health. She had noticed that during the last year he had been taking a
lot of medicine. Perhaps he was going to die. Caroline began to compose
a little drama to herself. Mr Murphy had just collapsed across his desk
and she had been the only one to keep a clear head....

“You coming, Caroline?” It was Robert Holton.

“Be right there.” She arranged the papers on her desk, shut the drawers
and joined Robert Holton outside the gate of the railing.

“Where’ll we eat today?” asked Holton.

“At _the_ restaurant, of course. Where did you think we would?”

“Oh, I don’t know.” He was smiling now and she wondered if he could
have been trying to be funny; she could never be sure.

“Sometimes you don’t make sense,” said Caroline.

They were almost through the door when one of the secretaries called to
Holton. “Phone, Bob.”

She waited for him at the door. He went over to his desk and answered
the phone. He seemed excited, she noticed, and he talked very quickly.
She wished she could hear what he was saying. Finally, he finished and
joined her.

“Who was that?”

“An old friend of mine.”

“Man or woman?”

“A guy I used to know. He just got in town. He comes from out West and
I haven’t seen him for a couple of years.”

“You knew him in the army?”

“Yes.”

They walked through the offices to the elevator and Holton pressed the
button.

“What’s he doing in town?”

“He’s just visiting. I’m going to see him this afternoon. He’s coming
over here after lunch.”

“That’ll be nice. What does he look like?” She asked this gaily, hoping
to have some effect on him. She didn’t, though.

“I don’t know. He looks all right, I guess.”

“You certainly are good at description. Be sure to let me meet him.”

“I will.”

The elevator stopped for them and they pushed into the lunch-going
crowd. With a rush they descended to the street floor.

Outside the sun shone brightly above the street. The sky was a vivid
blue and the air smelt clean in spite of the exhaust fumes and the
people of the city. The day was warm.

They walked along the crowded street. Men of affairs with brief cases
walked in and out of swinging glass doors. Younger men of affairs,
wearing bowler hats and dark coats with darker velvet lapels, marched
solemnly in the parade of business. The white-faced clerks squinted at
the bright sun. Women secretaries walked together, admiring themselves
in the windows. As they walked they talked to each other and to
themselves.

“What a nice day,” said Caroline, breathing deeply and coughing as the
exhaust fumes tickled her throat.

“Must be nice in the country,” commented Robert Holton.

“Not you too?” Caroline laughed. “First Murphy and now you want to go
out in the country.”

“I don’t want to go. I just said it must be pleasant there.” They
crossed a street and he looked carefully to left and right and when
they finally crossed the street the crowd had gone around them and the
light was beginning to change again.

“Why do you take so long?” said Caroline disagreeably.

“Just careful, that’s all.”

They walked in silence then. She was very conscious of his being beside
her, of her arm being in his. This troubled Caroline, this awareness.
She looked at Holton’s face as they walked down the crowded street.
There was nothing in his face that she would like to have seen. This
made her feel better because he was not the right person.

Over the high gray buildings was a narrow section of bright blue sky.
It was almost too bright and contrasted strangely with the dingy
buildings and the dark streets. Caroline watched the blue sky suspended
upon the buildings. No clouds were in the sky but from time to time
a bird would circle in it. And, as she watched the sky, a large air
liner, like a rigid bird, moved straightly eastward.

Caroline breathed deeply again, careful this time not to get the
exhaust fumes too far down in her lungs. She coughed anyway.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Marjorie Ventusa looked through the plate-glass window at the street.
She had been watching off and on for half an hour, waiting for Robert
Holton to come.

Some days he would come in at twelve and other days at twelve-thirty,
and then there had been certain days when he’d not come in at all and
those were bad days for Marjorie Ventusa.

It was a few minutes after twelve when she saw him walking down the
street, pushing through the crowd, a man different from all the others
walking in the street. She frowned when she saw the pretty secretary
with him. Marjorie hated this girl but she was helpless and could only
hate all the others who seemed close to Robert Holton.

She pretended to be busy cleaning a table when they came in.

“Hello, Marjorie,” said Holton and he and Caroline came over to her
table.

“Oh, hello, it’s you again.” She made herself sound matter-of-fact and
bored, but her throat was suddenly full and she had to clear it before
she could speak again. “What you going to eat today?”

“I don’t know,” said Holton and he and Caroline sat down at the table,
across from each other. “What do you want, Caroline?”

“I’d like to see a menu, I think,” said Caroline in a voice that
Marjorie Ventusa would like to have choked out of her.

“Here,” said Marjorie and she handed them two white menus.

They studied the menus.

Many people were coming in and going out of the restaurant. All the
tables were full now and there were people standing and waiting for
tables. Some of her customers were beginning to look at her, waiting
for her to take their order. She hoped Mrs Merrin would not notice how
long she was taking with Robert Holton.

“I think,” said Caroline, frowning a thin hair-wide frown, “I think I
will have some tomato juice, and a lamb chop....”

“No more lamb chops,” said Marjorie, trying to keep the triumph from
her voice.

The hair-wide frown became a scowl. “Then I’ll have the veal.”

“Any vegetables?”

“Yes, the spinach.”

“You can have one other.”

“That’s all.”

And Marjorie thought, “the” spinach indeed. Why was it that when these
people wanted to sound elegant they would talk about everything as
“the”?

“What do you want, Mr Holton?” She wished that she had the nerve to
call him Bob, the right to call him that.

“Oh, I think I’ll take the same.”

“Coffee, tea, or milk?” She said the words as though they were one word.

They both asked for coffee and Marjorie went quickly out of the dining
room and into the kitchen.

There was much more steam in the kitchen now than there had been at
breakfast; as the day passed the kitchen got hotter, and steamier, and
the cooks got more irritable and Mrs Merrin more nervous and Marjorie
Ventusa would become tired and sad.

She called the new orders to the cook. Then she picked up two small
glasses of tomato juice and put them on her tray. She fingered one of
them a moment, thinking that soon he would be drinking from it. She
enjoyed thinking of this, though it only made her desire stronger and
her sadness greater.

She didn’t want to go back yet. She hoped Mrs Merrin would not come
into the kitchen for a while.

But one of the swinging doors opened and Mrs Merrin walked into the
kitchen. Quickly Marjorie picked up her tray and went back to the
dining room.

Caroline and Robert Holton were talking seriously and Marjorie, because
of the noise of voices in the dining room, couldn’t hear what they were
saying.

They stopped talking as she came up to them.

“Here you are,” said Marjorie Ventusa brightly, putting the glasses of
tomato juice on the table.

Robert Holton smiled at her, showing his white even teeth.

“Have you got a date for tonight?” asked Robert Holton.

“You know I always do.”

“A sailor maybe?”

“I’m not saying.”

“Get one who’ll take you to Italy.”

This was cruel but Marjorie smiled and forgave him. She had not been
joking when they spoke of Italy. She did not think it fair of him to
say this in front of the pretty girl, but Marjorie forgave him because
he was young and because she felt about him in a certain way.

“Maybe we’ll go to Capri together,” she said. “Is it nice there?”

Holton nodded. “Beautiful.”

Caroline said, “I’m sure you don’t want to take up any more of her
time, Bob. She’s got a lot of things to do.” Caroline gave Marjorie a
brilliant smile. A man from the table next to theirs said loudly, “When
are you bringing me my soup?”

“In just a minute, sir.” Marjorie looked at Robert Holton once again,
tried to catch his eye but he was talking now to Caroline and Marjorie
Ventusa had been put quietly from his mind. She went back to the
kitchen.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Outside the restaurant Richard Kuppelton and the receptionist Ruth
were wondering whether anybody they knew would be in the restaurant;
otherwise they would have to wait for a table.

Kuppelton looked through the window. He blinked nearsightedly. Then he
saw Robert Holton and Caroline.

“Caroline’s in there,” he said.

“With Bob?”

“Yes.”

“Well, let’s go on in.” Ruth liked Robert Holton.

“Hello, hello,” said Kuppelton heartily when they were inside.

Caroline and Robert Holton appeared glad to see them.

“My gracious, it certainly is crowded,” said Ruth, pointing to the
people standing.

“Lucky you people were here,” said Kuppelton.

“I don’t,” said Ruth, “see how the town stays so crowded all the time.
I could understand it during the war but now ... well, it’s just
impossible to go anywhere or do anything.”

“I know,” said Holton. “Took me months to get a room.”

“Is it nice?” asked Caroline.

He shook his head. “It’s very depressing.”

“I guess I’m lucky to be living with my family,” said Kuppelton. “It’s
real nice out where we are and there aren’t so many people. I’d hate to
have to live in the city.”

They talked of the places where they lived and then they started to
talk of the places where they would like to live.

Kuppelton watched Holton as he talked and he tried to learn, by
concentrating intensely, what he was thinking; to learn if Mr Murphy
had said he would promote him. Holton’s smooth forehead, however, was a
wall and Kuppelton could not pierce it, could not discover the dreams
behind it.

Marjorie came over to their table and put two plates of veal in front
of Caroline and Robert. The veal was a uniform tan color, floating in a
sea of red sauce. Two saucers of dark-green spinach floating in water
were put beside the plates of veal.

“Looks good, doesn’t it?” commented Marjorie.

“Sure, sure,” said Holton, looking at his plate with distaste.

Kuppelton ordered veal and Marjorie left.

Kuppelton looked at Ruth. She was dark, with a big nose and with
self-pitying eyes. Her complexion was oily and she wore too much
make-up. Ruth liked all men; she was sitting very close to Robert
Holton now.

“Any interesting people come into the office?” asked Holton, turning
to Ruth: as receptionist she was always able to tell them about
celebrities.

Ruth nodded. “Laura Whitner was in to see Mr Heywood.”

Caroline was interested. “She’s the movie star, isn’t she?”

Ruth nodded again, a birdlike motion. “Why, she used to be one of the
biggest stars. I used to go see all her pictures. My gracious, they
were wonderful.”

Marjorie Ventusa returned with veal for Kuppelton and the ham and eggs
for Ruth.

“Oh, thank you,” said Ruth. “I love ham,” she added.

Richard Kuppelton looked at Ruth with disapproval. She was an
aggressive woman and he was tired of aggressive women. His mother was
that way. Caroline was more what he wanted. She had spirit but was not
aggressive. There was a difference between spirit and aggressiveness.
He could not quite define it but still there was a difference. Caroline
could act irritated with him and he would not mind. And she always
smiled, even when she was angry; he could not feel that a woman who
always smiled was aggressive. She had a mind of her own but then he
could handle that. Eating veal, Richard Kuppelton felt he could handle
anything.

Robert Holton finished eating. He sat back in his chair and yawned.

“Bored?” asked Caroline.

He shook his head. “No, not very. Just sleepy.”

“Well, I like that!” exclaimed Ruth. “You’d think we weren’t good
enough for him.” She said this in a way to let him know she was being
humorous.

Kuppelton decided, however, to develop what she’d said. “Sure, he’s a
good friend of Mr Heywood.”

Ruth was impressed. “I certainly wish I had your contacts then. I sure
wouldn’t be working in this lousy job.”

Robert Holton wanted to know what was wrong with her job.

“Oh, you know how it is. Doing the same thing day after day. It makes
me sick. I’d like to do something exciting.”

“Like what?” asked Richard Kuppelton. These were his secret wishes,
too, but he would never have put them into words. He was delighted to
hear someone else say them.

Ruth was not sure just what she wanted. She decided she would like to
travel. Richard Kuppelton admitted, then, that he would like to travel.
Caroline thought a moment and agreed with them that to travel would be
the best thing anyone could do, the thing she wanted to do.

Robert Holton, who had traveled, said that he didn’t care to leave New
York again: not for many years at least.

“You’re not adventurous,” said Caroline sadly.

Ruth protected him. “After all, he’s had some adventures. He was in the
war.”

Richard Kuppelton was glad that Holton did not talk about the war.
It made too great a difference between them and the women might have
called attention to this difference.

He disliked Robert Holton because he was afraid of him. It was more
than the threat to his job, much more than that. Caroline, whom
Kuppelton wanted, seemed interested in him. He flattered himself that
she was no more interested in Holton than she was in himself; still he
was a threat.

Ruth was moving closer to Robert Holton now. Her thick curved lips,
heavily painted a dark red, looked unpleasantly moist. Kuppelton had
a desire to dry her mouth. He was amused, though, at the way she was
playing up to Holton. She liked him now because of his influence, not
because he was good-looking. Although Kuppelton, for one, couldn’t see
his handsomeness. Holton was well-built but not much better than he
was; of course, Kuppelton had a slight stomach and Holton didn’t, but a
few days of exercise and he could be as slim. He made a mental note to
do some exercise.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Marjorie Ventusa arranged her hair in front of the steamy mirror. It
didn’t look too bad when she wore it over her ears. She pinned it back
carefully. Perhaps she wouldn’t have to get a snood after all.

She put some other people’s orders on her tray and left the kitchen.
The crowd waiting to be seated was beginning to thin and soon the lunch
rush would be over.

She waited on the customers whose orders she had and then she moved
over to the table where Robert Holton was sitting. He was very
handsome, she thought. She looked at the others with him and she envied
them all. They didn’t understand what he was, how important he was.

The girl with the blue eyes and slim legs she could not like. This
was her rival--one of her rivals, anyway. She was glad that he never
seemed particularly interested in this girl and, for that matter, the
girl didn’t seem interested in him. Still she was near, worked with him
probably: she was a danger.

Then Marjorie Ventusa did not like the dark-haired girl with the big
nose who sat so close to him, but at least she was not a danger. She
almost pitied this girl who had moved her chair so close to his that
their legs were touching.

The other man was dull-looking and obviously interested in the girl
with the blue eyes. Marjorie Ventusa wished him luck. Then, having
thought these things about her customers, she walked over to their
table.

“Ready for dessert?” asked Marjorie Ventusa cheerfully, trying not to
look at Robert Holton.

They were ready.

Everyone decided to have vanilla ice cream. Slowly she cleared the
table. This was a hard thing to do, because she had to act as if she
were in a hurry.

They talked at the table as though she weren’t there. She was,
naturally, used to that: she had been a waitress a long time, but today
she was almost angry at being treated like a piece of furniture. She
could do nothing about it, though. She picked up her tray and went into
the kitchen.

Marjorie ordered the ice cream. As she waited she wondered if there
was any way she could ever see Robert Holton in his other life: the
mysterious important life he had in the brokerage firm. She tried to
think of some way she could get to know him in this other life. She
could think of nothing.

The ice cream was ready and she took it back to the dining room.

She gave them their dessert and only Holton said thank you. She tried
to expand this one phrase into a conversation but it was too difficult.
So she walked over to the next table which was now empty. Slowly she
placed dishes on her tray. She was near enough to them to hear what
they were saying.

Robert Holton was talking about his job: “I don’t mind being in an
office all day. I can’t see why people mind that so much.”

The dark girl with the big nose disagreed: “It’s much more natural to
be able to wander around like you want to do. It’s natural to travel, I
think.”

He laughed. Marjorie liked his laugh. He said, “You should get married,
that’s what you should do.”

The dark girl became coquettish. “But I haven’t had any offers yet. Of
course, I’m open to any.”

The bitch, thought Marjorie Ventusa, disliking her now.

“You shouldn’t have any trouble,” said Holton gallantly and Marjorie
liked him for saying this.

“You’re just saying that.”

Then the girl with the blue eyes and the dull man began to talk
together and their voices blended into the ocean-like sound of many
voices in the restaurant.

They finished the ice cream.

Marjorie walked over to the table. “Will there be anything else?” she
asked officially.

There was nothing else.

“We’ll have our check, please, Marjorie,” said Robert Holton and she
liked the way he said her name.

“Certainly.” She went to the cashier and had the four checks totalled.
Then she came back.

They paid her.

“Back to work,” said the blue-eyed girl with a sigh.




                            _Chapter Seven_


“Here we are,” said Caroline.

Ruth went to her desk in the reception room. “I’ll see you all later,”
she said and she sat down and took out a large gold compact. Caroline
watched her a moment as she powdered her nose, watched her with a
certain pity because she was ugly.

“Come on,” said Kuppelton and he and Robert Holton walked on either
side of her through the office. She was conscious of the envious stares
of the other girls and she smiled at them as nicely as she could,
knowing that they hated her for her smile.

Mr Murphy was not in the Statistical office. Everyone else was back,
though. As she entered the room Caroline was conscious of a difference
in the atmosphere. The women were quieter than usual and the men were
watching. She looked and saw, sitting at Holton’s desk, an army officer.

“Jim!” said Holton when he saw him; the other looked up.

“Hi,” he said and he got to his feet. They shook hands with Anglo-Saxon
restraint, muttering monosyllables of greeting, each asking about the
other’s health.

Kuppelton went to his own desk without speaking to the army officer.
Caroline stood expectantly beside Robert Holton, waiting to be
introduced.

“This,” said Holton finally, “is Caroline. Caroline, meet Jim Trebling.”

“How do you do,” said Trebling.

“How do you do,” said Caroline and they shook hands. His hand, she
noticed, was rough and hard.

“You live in New York?” asked Caroline. This was always a good
beginning because it could lead to all sorts of confessions.

He shook his head. “No, I’m from California. I’m from Los Angeles.”

She was impressed. “That’s where Hollywood is, isn’t it? You from
Hollywood?”

No, he was not from Hollywood. He lived near by.

“I’d certainly like to visit out there.”

“It’s not as interesting as New York.”

She gave a little laugh to show her scorn for New York, her laugh
leveling the buildings and cracking Grant’s Tomb. “It’s awful here,”
she said. “We have an awful climate.”

He raised the buildings again. “Oh, I think it’s pretty exciting.
You’ve got so many things. This is really the first time I’ve seen New
York. Bob and I went overseas from here and we came back here but I
never really saw the town.”

“Are you regular army?” she asked. Men in uniform were becoming rare.

“No, I’m getting out soon. I signed up for a little while longer.”

“Oh.”

He and Robert Holton began to talk then about the army and she felt
shut out. She stood there wondering whether she should go or not. She
rather liked this young man. He was a lieutenant, at least he had one
bar on his shoulder and she thought that lieutenants wore a single bar:
the war had been such a long time ago and she had forgotten so many
things.

He had dark eyes and bleached-looking hair which Caroline had always
found attractive in men. His skin was rather pale for a Californian;
all Californians had brown skin in her imagination. He was not
particularly handsome, though he looked rather distinguished, with
sharp features and circles under his eyes.

“Are you in the East long?” she asked.

He looked at her as if he had forgotten she was there; still, he was
very polite. “No, I’m only here for a week.”

“Looking around?”

“Yes, looking around.”

“Caroline,” said Robert Holton, as though explaining an important
thing, “Caroline is the belle of the office.”

“I can see that,” said Trebling without too much effort, saying it
almost naturally, a hard thing to do.

“Oh, thank you,” said Caroline. Now she didn’t know what to say. She
looked at his ribbons. She counted them mechanically, the way she did
before the war ended: five ribbons. “You must’ve been around quite a
bit,” she said finally, speaking before the silence her last words had
made became another conversation.

Trebling nodded seriously. “Yes, I saw quite a bit. No more than Bob
did, though.”

“That must’ve been nice,” said Caroline, “your being able to serve
together everywhere.”

“Yes, it was.”

She knew that they were waiting for her to go but she wasn’t ready yet.
“Do you like being in the army in peacetime?”

“No, not particularly.”

“Well, you’ll be out soon, I suppose.”

“Quite soon.”

She had to go now. She couldn’t understand what kept her standing there
foolishly trying to make a conversation by herself. It was not as if
Lieutenant Trebling were handsome or unusual.

Caroline made her great effort. “Well,” she said, “I guess I’ll see
you later, Mr Trebling.” Was that the right name? She wasn’t sure. She
hoped she hadn’t said it wrong.

“Nice to have met you, Caroline.” She smiled at him, her face at a
three-quarter angle: her most flattering angle. Then, with great
nonchalance, she walked slowly back to her desk.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Trebling was surprised at the way Holton looked out of uniform.

To have lived several years with a person who looked always one way
and then to see him later another way is startling. Jim Trebling had
always thought of Holton as a soldier: he could not get used to him as
a civilian in an office.

“Sit down, Jim.” Holton pointed to a chair beside his desk. They both
sat down. Trebling felt a little awkward. The office was too formal for
him and he was not at ease.

Jim looked at Holton, trying to get accustomed to him. “You’ve
certainly changed. I don’t know if I’d have recognized you.”

Robert Holton laughed a little self-consciously. “These civilian
clothes _are_ different. They make you feel different.”

“You’re really settling down, I guess.”

“I’m afraid so.”

“I wish I could. Maybe I will when I get out ... I don’t know.”

“What do you think you’re going to do?”

Jim shrugged. “I don’t know. I’ve been thinking of starting some kind
of a business. You know, what we used to talk about before you got out.”

Holton nodded. “That’s a good idea, I guess. I thought of it, too, but
of course the odds are against you.”

Trebling was surprised to hear Holton say this. “I know it,” he said.

Holton saw then that he hadn’t said the right thing. He tried to
explain. “I don’t mean you shouldn’t start a business. I just mean
something might go wrong.” He was saying worse things now; he stopped.

Jim changed the subject. “How do you like being out?”

“Oh, it’s pretty wonderful. Just to be able to stay in one place....”

“I guess it’s nice for a while.”

Holton sighed. “I don’t think I’ll ever travel again.”

Jim was surprised. “I thought you were going to go around the world.
Don’t you remember when we used to talk about seeing more of Italy?”

“Well, maybe sometime. I hadn’t stopped moving for very long then.”

“No, that’s right, you hadn’t.” As they talked Jim Trebling became more
uneasy. This was a person he had not met before and he was surprised
and sorry. Robert Holton had been different as a soldier.

As they talked, the words forming conventional patterns and hiding
their real thoughts, Jim thought of the war.

“You remember the time we were in Florence?”

Holton said that he remembered it very well.

They spoke then of Florence and as they talked Jim Trebling began to
remember many things.

                   *       *       *       *       *

The city had been liberated for several months. The war was almost over
and Holton and Trebling were able to take a week’s leave: they went to
Florence.

Parts of the city had been badly damaged. The old buildings on the Arno
had been leveled in many places but the Ponte Vecchio was still there.
These things had not been very important, however, because they had not
gone to see antiques. They had gone to rest, to meet women, and to try
to find enough liquor to get drunk on.

They stayed with a family outside of the town; they stayed in a place
called Fiesole.

Trebling remembered the house clearly: long and rambling, dirty-white
stucco with small iron balconies beneath the larger windows. A rock
garden, dusty gray-green olive trees and an unearthly view of the
valley in which was Florence.

The house belonged to a family named Bruno, friends of Robert Holton’s
mother. They had invited the two of them to stay as long as they liked:
in those days it was a good policy to have American soldiers in one’s
home.

Robert Holton had liked a girl named Carla. Trebling had liked her too,
but not as much as Holton did. He remembered one night when the three
had sat on the terrace, watching the city.

It was summer and the night was warm and vibrant. The city lights
glittered in the valley-cup; the lights were golden and flickering and
the river shone darkly.

They sat on a stone ledge, their feet dangling above the rock garden.
Carla was between them; her hair was dark and her face pale. They sat
like this, watching the lights of the city and listening to the sound
of insects whirring in the night.

And Jim had said, embarrassed by the long silence, “It’s so peaceful
here.”

The other two acted as if they had not heard him. Holton, sitting close
beside Carla, touched her.

And then she had said, “It seems like such a long time ago.” They
thought of this as they sat in the blue darkness.

Holton finally spoke, saying, “Isn’t it a shame that this has to change
again?”

They had been surprised to hear him say this; Trebling was more
surprised than Carla because, though he had known Holton longer, she
knew him better. Trebling was surprised to hear Holton speak seriously:
he was never serious at other times. He always tried to be funny.

“Why _should_ this change again?” asked Carla, looking at him,
trying to tell his expression in the dark.

Holton only sighed and said, “Because everything changes when you go
away.”

“You can come back,” said Carla and Jim remembered now the exact way
she had said that and he was sorry for her.

Holton didn’t answer for a moment and then he had said, “Yes, I suppose
you can.” They knew then that he would not come back and Trebling
could sense her sadness as they watched the lights flickering below
them.

                   *       *       *       *       *

“Do you remember Carla?” asked Jim suddenly, his mind adjusting to the
present.

“The girl in Florence? Sure, I remember her. Was that her name ...
Carla?”

“That’s right.”

“She was very nice looking, wasn’t she?”

“Yes.”

“Sure, I remember her.”

“I thought you liked her quite a bit,” said Trebling, not looking at
Holton.

“I suppose I did. We ran into a lot of people, though. There were so
many people.”

Trebling agreed that there had been a number of people in Europe,
people they had known.

“That was a good town, Florence,” said Holton suddenly.

“It was.”

“We were there a week, weren’t we?”

“About that.”

Holton nodded, and Trebling watched him to see how he felt; Holton’s
face told him nothing, though. He was only remembering.

“It’s certainly a nice feeling to be out,” said Holton finally.

“I guess it must be.”

“Not having to worry about being moved from place to place.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

They were standing in the Roman Forum. All around them were pieces
of shattered marble, shattered in earlier wars. Trebling and Holton
had looked at three slender columns of marble, all that was left of a
temple.

Trebling had remarked, “I’ll bet those pillars are pretty old.”

Holton agreed, “Maybe a thousand years old.”

Together they had looked at the three columns of the ruined temple.

Trebling asked, “Do you think you would’ve ever gotten here except in
the army?”

“No. I don’t guess so.”

“I probably wouldn’t have either.”

“It’s sort of interesting.”

And Trebling had said, “I like the traveling part of all this.”

Robert Holton agreed to this and then they began to complain about
other things.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Trebling sat back in his chair and looked around the office. He didn’t
like offices and he didn’t like this one at all. The clear constant
light standardized the people in the room.

“How do you like it here?” he asked.

Holton shrugged. “O.K., I suppose. It’s something to do.”

“You think you’ll stay in this sort of work?”

“Probably, I don’t know yet.”

“I had thought you might go into this new thing with me.

“Well....”

Neither spoke for a moment.

Finally Trebling asked, “Can I smoke in here?”

“I’m sorry, Jim, but....”

“Sure, I know: rules.”

“I’m sorry. These people are awful stiff about a lot of things.”

Jim Trebling wished again that he hadn’t come. He had an impulse to run
away. “What’re you doing tonight?” he asked finally.

“I’m going to a big cocktail party.”

“Being social, eh?”

“Well, you know you have to make contacts ...” he continued, explaining
himself carefully.

Then Holton asked Jim about himself, and he listened as Jim talked. The
cataloguing of army camps, the different duties in each, the girl he
had decided to marry and then didn’t, his current leave of absence, the
trip across the country, the pleasure of seeing Robert Holton again.

Trebling told this story automatically, as one always tells a much-told
personal story and as he told this he wondered what had happened to
Holton.

In the war he had been considered wild. He had spent most of the time
laughing at things. He had been easily bored and now he was changed.

“It must be nice to be out,” Trebling repeated, not knowing what else
to say.

And Robert Holton explained to him in detail why it was so nice to be
free.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Paris had been the most interesting place of all. They had spent two
days there. Trebling had been very conscientious and had insisted that
they see palaces and landmarks and they had actually tried to see a
few but then Holton decided that there was not enough time for that.
They met two girls. Trebling could not remember their names; he could
remember nothing about them except that they were rather pretty and
claimed to be sisters.

The girls had suggested they go on a picnic. Holton had liked this
idea and he managed to get some food from the mess officer of a
near-by company. They took bicycles and drove out of Paris. They rode
through Sèvres and some small towns on the outskirts. They approached
Versailles but the girls didn’t care to go into the town and so they
turned left from the main road. At a small town called Jouy-en-Josas
they stopped, and on the dark green lawn of a bombed-out château they
had their picnic.

The sky was overcast that day. And the woods that surrounded the
château were blue and smoky and looked mysterious, like the pictures of
enchanted forests in children’s books.

When they had finished lunch Holton wanted to go walk in the woods.
Only one of the girls spoke English.

“Let’s take a walk in the woods,” Holton suggested.

The two girls giggled and talked together very quickly in French. The
one who spoke English finally said, “Sure, we go walk in the woods with
you.” They walked in the woods.

Hand in hand the two couples walked between the misty trees. There
was no underbrush here and the trees came up out of the stony,
grass-covered ground, free and straight.

The two girls understood what was expected of them. His most vivid
memory was not of the one he had but of Holton’s: a stocky, pink-faced
girl. He remembered clearly the way her head lolled against the tree,
her eyes closed and her thick lips slightly ajar. He remembered that
her hair was almost the same color as the bark of the tree.

“Say, Bob, do you remember those two girls from Paris?”

“When was that?”

“You know, the time we went on the picnic.”

“I’m afraid I’ve forgotten.” That was that.

A large important-looking man came into the office. When he saw
Trebling with Holton he stopped in the middle of the room, changed his
course with the unself-conscious dignity of a schooner under full sail,
and walked straight over to them.

Holton got to his feet quickly and Trebling did the same, sensing that
this was a person of importance.

“Jim Trebling, this is Mr Murphy, the Chief of our section.”

“Glad to meet you, Lieutenant.” They shook hands vigorously, Mr Murphy
smiling with goodwill.

“Well, Lieutenant, I suppose you’ll be getting out soon?”

Mechanically Trebling explained what he was planning to do.

“Think you’ll go into Business?” asked Mr Murphy.

“Maybe, I don’t know.”

“Lot of openings now for a young man who wants to get ahead.”

“There probably are.”

They talked for a while of Business as though it were a state of being.

Trebling looked at Holton as Mr Murphy talked, looked at him, trying
to find something familiar in his face. For a moment as he looked he
thought he could see a tightness about the mouth, an effort at control
but Jim Trebling could not tell what Holton was controlling and the
mouth soon relaxed and he could tell nothing then.

Coming back on the boat together they had talked of what they were
going to do when they got out.

“I think I’d like to make money,” said Holton, looking at the white
wake of the ship.

“That’s not a bad idea. How?”

“Damned if I know.”

“We could always start that pottery business I was telling you about,
back in California.”

“That’s a thought.”

“Of course there’re a lot of other things we could do.”

“I suppose it’s all a matter of picking the right one.”

They looked at the gray water and thought of new things, of works not
yet begun. Pensively Holton leaned out over the railing and spat.
Trebling, interested, did the same. For several moments they were in
serious contest to determine who could spit the farthest. Holton won,
although Trebling claimed he had been helped by a gust of wind.

Then they walked about the decks of the transport. Soldiers were
everywhere. They sat in groups on the covered hatches, they leaned over
the railing to look at the sea and, also, to be sick.

“I guess all these people are going to be trying the same thing,” said
Holton suddenly.

“Try what? Starting a business?”

Sure.

“I don’t think so.”

“A lot of them will.”

“So what?”

“I guess it could work.” They stopped amidships and looked out to
sea again. “I’d certainly like to have a lot of money,” said Holton
sincerely.

“So would I,” said Trebling with casual sincerity.

They had decided then to start in together when they got out of the
army. Holton had been discharged first, however, and he had immediately
joined Heywood and Golden. In his occasional letters Holton never
mentioned the business again. Trebling remembered that now and was
sorry so much had changed.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Mr Murphy was talking about Business.

Holton was listening to him with what appeared to be interest. Trebling
shook himself and tried to act as if he had been following the lesson
Mr Murphy had been giving him.

“Very nice to have met you, Lieutenant,” said Mr Murphy at last.

“Nice to meet you.” They shook hands. Mr Murphy turned to Holton. “I’d
like to see you for a moment if your friend doesn’t mind.”

“Certainly.” Holton gestured to Trebling to stay where he was. Then Mr
Murphy and Holton went over to the other end of the office where the
windows were.

Jim Trebling sat in his uncomfortable chair beneath the fluorescent
lights. He wanted to leave this office, leave it now and not come back.
He couldn’t understand Holton any longer. He no longer knew him.

Trebling was aware of someone standing beside him. He looked up: it was
the blue-eyed girl. He started to get to his feet.

“Don’t move,” she said. “I’m just passing by. Mr Murphy and Bob seem to
be having some sort of conference. I thought I’d wait outside the gate
till they were through.”

“Sit down,” said Trebling.

“Thank you.” She sat down in the chair beside him. He wondered what to
say to her, what to talk about.

“Have you been here long?” he asked.

She told him that she had been there for several years.

“It must be interesting working in a place like this.”

She laughed. “It’s pretty awful, I think. As jobs go, of course, it’s
not bad.”

“But you’d rather not work at all.”

“That’s right.”

“Well, you’ll probably be married soon.” This was a leading question.
There was a simple ritual to conversation with pretty girls who might
be had.

She recognized this and answered according to the ritual, “Oh, maybe
someday, when I meet the right person.”

This could mean a lot. He was interested now. “That’s important,
meeting the right person.”

They were both silent, thinking how important it was to meet the right
person.

Trebling began to think of this girl (was her name Caroline?) quite
seriously. It was such an important thing to discover: if she could be
had or not. For one night she might be very pleasant. He liked the way
she looked. But then he thought of certain other one-night stands and
of the phone calls and letters and emotion that often came of them. He
would be very careful about this. He resumed.

“I suppose you can have a pretty good time in New York if you know the
right places to go.”

“Yes, there are some nice places. You have to be very careful, though.”

“A lot of them are clip joints, I guess.”

She laughed. “I’ll say they are.”

“Depends, I guess, on who you go out with.”

“Well, you should know your way around.”

They were drawing nearer and nearer to the act. Everything was going
well. She was returning all his signals. He began to breathe a little
hard as they approached the gateway.

“I know so few people in New York,” he said. “Bob’s really the only
person I know well. I don’t know any girls.”

“Well, there’re a lot of them around.”

“I know.” He paused and then he began to speak carefully but casually.
“I was going out tonight but I don’t think I will now.”

“Why?”

“It’s not much fun alone.” This was said almost pathetically.

“What about Bob?”

“He’s going to that cocktail party.”

“Oh, yes, I forgot.” A pause now, a silence with great meaning in it.

“Maybe,” and he was saying it at last, “maybe _you_ might go out
with me tonight.”

“Me!” Surprise, pleasure, a certain asperity, all these emotions
splendidly portrayed in that one word. “Well....”

“Of course if you’re busy....”

“Oh, no....” She spoke almost too quickly. “I’m not really certain,”
she added, regaining her dignity. “Perhaps you might call me back
around five. I’ll know then.” At that moment both of them knew.

“That would be fine. I hope you don’t think it’s ...”

“Certainly not.” Then she said that any friend of Bob’s was a friend of
hers.

Trebling felt pleased with himself for having managed so well. It
might take a week but it would still be pleasant. He looked forward to
the final moment of yielding. He sighed and started to think of other
things.

Caroline, seeing that Holton was on his way back, got up from her
chair. “Nice to have seen you, Lieutenant. I’ll be looking forward to
your call.”

He also stood up. “I hope you can make it.” She said that she did, too,
and they both knew what was going to happen. Robert Holton came back
and Caroline left.

“That’s a pretty girl,” said Trebling.

“Caroline? Yes, she’s pretty nice.”

They stood looking at each other awkwardly. “Shall we get together
tomorrow evening?” suggested Holton.

“Sure, that’d be fine.”

“Well, listen, Jim, it’s been wonderful seeing you....”

“And I’ve enjoyed it....” Their voices intermingled into a single
sound. Neither of them listened to the words of the other.

“See you tomorrow then, Bob?”

“See you then.” They said good-bye and Jim Trebling left the office.
As he stood in the reception room waiting for the elevator he felt sad
at the way Holton had changed. It was such a shame because they had
once been very close. Then Jim Trebling thought of Caroline and he felt
happier. The Carolines were the important things.

The elevator door opened and he stepped inside.




                            _Chapter Eight_


At five-thirty the world ceased to be official and became private.

Happily Robert Holton put away his books and figures and prepared to
leave. Monday was over and he wouldn’t let himself think of the other
days of his week.

Caroline was putting on her hat and Mr Murphy sat at his desk behind
her, dreaming, his eyes fixed shrewdly upon nothing.

Robert Holton walked over to Caroline.

“Ready to go?”

She nodded. “All ready.” Together they walked through the emptying
offices, rode down the crowded elevator, and stepped out into the more
crowded street.

The sky was gray now and the sun had vanished behind buildings. The air
was cool and the smell of exhaust was strong as cars moved slowly in
the streets, trying to escape to less crowded places. They walked with
the stream of people toward the subway opening. They talked.

“Guess what?” said Caroline.

“What?”

“I’m going out tonight.”

“Well?”

“I’m going out with Lieutenant Trebling.”

He was surprised. “That was fast work. Did he do that while he was in
the office?”

“We talked about it. He called me back later and I told him I’d go out
with him.”

“Well, well.” Holton was admiring but Caroline was not sure whether he
was admiring her or Trebling.

“I think he’s nice,” she said, not committing herself.

“Yes, he’s a good guy.”

They crossed a street nervously and in silence. On the other side they
went on talking.

“Tell me something about him?” she asked.

“There’s not much to tell. He’s from the West Coast. He went to UCLA,
I think, and his old man’s in the insurance business. He went into the
army about the same time I did and he’s still in.”

“That’s not what I want to know.”

“Well, what do you want to know?”

She had trouble saying this. “Oh, you know ... the sort of person he
is. All that sort of thing.”

Robert Holton, who hadn’t thought much about it, had a hard time
answering. “I guess he’s what you’d call a dreamer. He’s not very
practical. He always wants to start things ... businesses, you know. In
the war he was pretty good and other people liked him. He wasn’t very
wild then.”

“Is he now?”

“Just his ideas. In those days I used to be the wild one.”

She laughed and thought he was joking with her and this made him angry
and sad but there was nothing he could do about it because he had
assumed a certain identity with her and it had to be maintained.

“I’ll bet you were wild!”

“We all change,” he said.

She wasn’t interested in how he’d changed, though: she was interested
in Jim Trebling. “I don’t suppose he’s engaged or anything like that?”
She was casual.

Holton laughed. “No, you can get him if you want to.”

“I didn’t mean that at all. What do you mean by saying that?”

“Not a thing.”

She went on talking for several moments, trying to be indignant. Then
they crossed another street and she stopped talking.

They walked with the current of people, walked uncomfortably but
deliberately over the sidewalk ventilators of the subway beneath. As
they walked they could feel the thunder of a subway train under their
feet, vibrating upward, like a great emotion, into their stomachs.

Then they came to the opening of the subway. With a deep breath they
descended into the pit. Like lemmings dashing seaward the people pushed
down the steps and into already crowded trains.

Caroline and Holton were separated. A sudden push of the crowd threw
her into the train just before the door closed. He caught a last
glimpse of her serene beauty being crushed between a large Negress and
a tall white man. The train gave a rumble and pulled away.

Holton stood on the concrete platform with a hundred others who had
missed this train and were waiting for the next.

He walked up and down between the concrete pillars, looking at the
broken machines which were supposed to sell gum and peanuts and, from
habit, he put his finger into one of the slots to see if anything was
there: nothing was there however.

He admired the advertisements. His favorite one, the girl advertising
beer, was not in this station but there were others. Two very excellent
ones of movie actresses, young women hauntingly attractive with red
lips. He admired these even though the most beautiful actress of all
had had her front teeth blacked out and a crude phallic image drawn
over her passionate face. There were people in the world who would do
those things, of course, and he was not annoyed.

The other advertisements were less interesting and he didn’t look at
them very long.

Another train roared through the tunnel, stopping with great noise; the
doors opened and people flowed out; then another rush to get on the
train. Robert Holton allowed himself to be carried into the hot stale
car.

                   *       *       *       *       *

He liked to walk in the Park. In the evenings the Park was the most
peaceful place in the city. A few people would be sitting on the
benches and a few couples would be walking between trees but there were
never many people here in the early evening and the ones that were
there were always quiet.

As Robert Holton walked the miracle of the street lamps took place,
white light filling the bulbs and changing the early evening, the
twilight period, to a premature night.

He walked quickly now because it was almost six o’clock. Mrs Raymond
Stevanson’s cocktail parties often went on until nine or ten o’clock
and occasionally they lasted all night but he couldn’t know this for
certain and he didn’t want to be late.

Robert Holton thought sadly about Jim Trebling as he walked, breathing
the cool air. A short time had made a lot of difference and he was
aware of this difference.

Trebling was apt to be impractical. It was a likeable quality in the
army; he himself hadn’t made much sense in those days, but things had
changed now. This was the time to be practical and Jim Trebling was not.

A couple were embracing beside a large rock. He watched them with
interest as he went by.

He had tried to pretend to be the same but the effort, or the change,
had been too great. It made him unhappy to think that he and Trebling
had really been so different, had always been so different, even in
those days. He was shocked to think that Trebling remembered the army
as a pleasant period of his life. There had been times, of course....

Another couple came out of the woods, walked to the pathway and looked
uncertainly about them, as though unsure of themselves. When he glanced
at them they looked at him angrily, as if he had been spying. He walked
away.

Robert Holton was not sure why he had changed toward Trebling. He
wanted to be the same. He wanted to take up the friendship where it had
been broken but he could not. He was not going to change again.

A nurse with a baby carriage was hurrying streetward. It was late,
probably much too late for her to be out with the baby. As she passed
him he caught a glimpse of the child and saw that it was staring
vacantly ahead, concentrating upon growth.

He followed the nurse and the carriage toward the street. Robert Holton
smiled to himself when he thought of Caroline and Jim Trebling going
out together. It was always interesting when people out of different
periods of his life came to know each other. He had never associated
Trebling with Caroline before.

He took a last deep breath of air before he left the Park. He wished
vaguely that he might have more time to walk in the Park and straighten
out certain things.

The uptown streets were not crowded. A few people were coming home from
work; most of the people were already home by now. Children played
together in the streets, shouting at one another in sharp hoarse
voices. A smell of cooking was in the streets.

                   *       *       *       *       *

There was no mail for him.

This was not a good day. On the good days there was mail; days could
be bad when there wasn’t any. Not that there was anyone Robert Holton
wanted to hear from in particular but he was less alone when he had
letters to read.

“Been a nice day,” said the person behind the desk.

“It certainly has,” said Robert Holton.

“Won’t be long until it’s winter,” said the person behind the desk.

“It won’t be long,” said Holton. He turned then and walked through the
dingy lobby to the elevator.

He and the elevator boy discussed the kind of day it had been. They
also decided that it would be winter soon.

His room looked no more cheerful than usual. Robert Holton sat down on
the bed, leaving the room dark. It gave him a feeling of power to think
that, when he chose, he could turn on a light and dispel the darkness.

He started to think of Trebling but stopped himself. There was nothing
to be done now. The old friendship was gone.

Trebling had mentioned a girl named Carla. He remembered her well. She
had been pretty and intense and wealthy. He had not thought about her
for a long time. She had been a strange girl, gentle and understanding.
He had been greatly attracted to her and she to him.

They had walked around Florence and Fiesole. She had taken him to old
palaces and churches although he hadn’t wanted to go. When he had
objected she told him that she was trying to show him something. He
never knew what it was she wanted to show him. When he left Florence he
told her that he would write: he didn’t, though, and he had not thought
of her again until today.

The thing he had liked most about Carla, the thing he could remember
now, was her way of understanding him. She once told him that it wasn’t
necessary to finish sentences when they talked; that she knew what he
would say and that he should know what she would say.

Sitting in the dark of his hotel room, Robert Holton thought of all
the women he had known and liked; some he had slept with and some he
hadn’t. Most of them he had forgotten. Now he only thought of them when
someone else recalled them to him.

And he did remember about Paris. He remembered the picnic outside
Versailles, although he could not remember the faces of the two girls.

In Europe there had been so many women. He often was surprised now
when he thought of how many he had known. There were periods when he
had been never satisfied. Both Trebling and he had gone about it like
hunters. Trebling was probably still hunting, thought Holton suddenly,
and he wondered if he was, too. No, that was behind him. He had to live
and act in a different way now. He had to be a different person.

Robert Holton turned on the light beside his bed. He blinked in the
yellow light and suddenly he was dissatisfied with the room. He wished
for the first time that he were somewhere else; it didn’t matter where,
just somewhere else. He was a person of great logic, though, and he
asked himself what he would rather be doing and he couldn’t think of
anything else to do. He didn’t want to travel. He had no desire to
escape. There was no place to escape to anyway and Robert Holton who
had a kind of wisdom knew that.

Then he took his clothes off and got under the shower. This was usually
the happiest part of his day. The warm water gave him a feeling of
security, relaxing him; the world fell into a genial perspective. He
finished bathing reluctantly and dressed quickly.

Finally he stood in front of the mirror again and combed his hair. He
was glad to see that he wasn’t losing his hair. Sometimes he thought he
was; at other times he knew he wasn’t.

He wasn’t displeased with himself. He wasn’t pleased either but he knew
that he was acceptable. There was no use in worrying, anyway. He wished
sometimes that his nose could have been more aquiline. He would like to
look more impressive. Perhaps his face would get that way as he grew
older. He turned away from the mirror.

He looked at the picture on the wall and wondered for the hundredth
time why the painter had made everything look so blue. The painter had
made one of the apples almost sky-blue and Robert Holton had never seen
an apple that color before and he found it hard to believe that there
was much advantage in so misrepresenting things. Perhaps in certain
parts of France the apples were blue.

He was dressed and ready now. He looked at his watch and saw that it
was a quarter to seven: he would have to hurry. Robert Holton looked
around the room to see if there was anything he wanted to take with
him. There wasn’t. He put on his trench coat, turned out the light, and
left the room.

The elevator boy wanted to know if he was going to a party.

“Sure, I’m going to a big party.”

“Lots of girls, I bet.” The pale thin elevator boy was interested.

“A whole lot of them.”

“Boy, I wish I was going out to something like that. This night work is
getting me down. I ain’t getting much relaxation.” He winked to show
what he meant by relaxation and Holton smiled sympathetically.

Robert Holton stopped by the desk.

“I’ll be back pretty early,” he said to the clerk. He always told them
when to expect him, told them from force of habit because no one ever
wanted to know.

“Yes, sir,” said the clerk. “Nice night tonight,” he added.

“Nice fall night,” agreed Robert Holton.

They discussed the evening politely. Then Robert Holton left the hotel.

It was darker now and cooler. The night was refreshing and he felt
suddenly strong and contented. The depression of the office left him
and he was becoming alive. He prepared himself for the party and for
the evening ahead. He walked briskly down the street and, to emphasize
his mood of sudden power, he hailed a taxi and rode in it happily,
without regret for the money he was spending.




                                   2
                                 NIGHT




                            _Chapter Nine_


The party seemed to be going well. Although Mrs. Raymond Stevanson
hated cocktail parties, finding her own almost as bad as other
people’s, she still felt she had to give them and she worked very hard
to make them outstanding.

Several hundred well-dressed people wandered about her large apartment,
looking at the furniture, each other, and the five different paintings
of Mrs Stevanson. There were no traces of Mr Stevanson in the
apartment. He had died early in her career, leaving her his money and
four race horses. She had sold the horses and she had saved quite a bit
of the money. Now, at fifty-five, she was a famous hostess and somewhat
overweight.

“Good evening, Helena.” Mrs Stevanson turned around and saw the thin
malicious face of Beatrice Jordan. They were contemporaries.

“Beatrice! How marvelous!” They touched cheeks with slight frowns, then
came apart again with affectionate smiles.

Beatrice stood back a moment and looked at Mrs Stevanson. Beatrice was
extremely nearsighted but much too vain to wear glasses. To see clearly
she was forced to tuck her chin down and look upward, a habit which had
given her an undeserved reputation as a coquette. She did this now.

“Helena, you’ve lost weight! How?”

Mrs Stevanson was pleased. “Does it really show?” She patted her
cement-hard corseted buttock.

“Not so much around there,” said Beatrice, thinking for a moment. “More
around here.” She touched her own meager breasts.

“You think so?” Mrs Stevanson was irritated and angry with herself
for allowing Beatrice Jordan to say such a thing. Mrs Stevanson was
proud of her breasts. Several of the famous painters had called her
voluptuous.

“It’s been lovely seeing you, Helena darling. I’ve got to join my
escort now. I came with Clyde.”

Beatrice said this triumphantly but gained no victory.

“You came with Clyde. How wonderful! I’m dining with him tomorrow.”

“Indeed?”

“Is he here now?”

“He’s in the other room.”

“Do tell him to see me before he leaves. There are _so_ many
people here.”

“I will, darling. Lovely to see you.” Beatrice smiled, showing her
artful white false teeth and Mrs Stevanson smiled back showing her own
artful white false teeth. The two women parted.

Mrs Stevanson was annoyed but she had found that the older she got the
less interested she was in what people said. It was well known anyway
that Beatrice Jordan was a cat.

Mrs Stevanson walked now from group to group. The groups unfolded for
her like flowers before the sun. She would disappear for a moment into
the heart of one and then it would unfold again, release her and
become tight and compact once more.

Certain groups contained people more important than other groups. In
these she lingered longest, smiling the most attractively, saying her
superlatives.

In the dining room a buffet had been set on a long table. Three footmen
(hired for the evening only) guarded it from the hungry-looking guests,
betrayed it to the superior ones who were not hungry.

Twenty or thirty people were gathered here and they looked rather
self-conscious as she approached. Somehow everyone felt rather guilty
to be caught eating heavily (they _were_ eating heavily, she
noticed) at a cocktail party.

She moved heartily about the dining room, demanding that they eat more,
suggesting they try something they had not already tried. And then, to
show she was mortal, she ate a piece of white bread with Virginia ham
on it.

The dining room under control, Mrs Stevanson marched back through the
drawing room, accepted greetings and homage with a tiny smile that one
of her lovers (he was dead now) had said reminded him of La Gioconda.

Mrs Stevanson, among other things, believed in art. Tonight she had
invited several writers, a few painters, one sculptor whose name she
couldn’t remember, and a half-dozen actors whose names everyone knew.

She had also invited George _Robert_ Lewis. For some obscure
reason his middle name was always Gallicized, legitimatizing the Lewis.
He had been born and raised in Alabama. Unfortunately for his family
he had very early shown a passion for the artistic as well as a marked
tendency toward Socratic love. When he decided that the thing he most
wanted was to go to Paris and become an artist, his family did not
object; in fact, his father had suggested that if he wanted to live the
rest of his life in Paris it was all right with him. Lewis lived there
in the Nineteen-Thirties. He returned in the Forties.

Mrs Stevanson thought him cute and she was in the habit of telling her
friends that, although his habits were shocking, he was still quite
charming and so _advanced_. And then he was marvelously decadent
and the decadent was becoming popular now that the artificial virility
of war was safely past.

George _Robert_ Lewis was also an interesting person to know
because he was the editor of _Regarde_, a magazine which had been
called _avant garde_ before that phrase became old-fashioned.
Under his editorship the magazine had advanced all new things in the
hope that one of the new things thus championed would be a success. So
far none had but he still was championing and, though Mrs Stevanson
seldom understood a word he said, she felt he was awfully brave to say
the dreadful things he did about people and morals, especially people.

Lewis was talking to a small brown man whom she didn’t remember
inviting.

“Dear Helena,” said Lewis as she approached, “you look wonderfully
well-preserved.”

“George, you’re a devil,” said Mrs Stevanson, secretly pleased.

Lewis embraced her in much the same way Beatrice Jordan had. “What mad
things have you been doing, Helena? Something naughty, I’m sure.” His
innocent blue eyes sparkled as he spoke. He had the expressions of a
child.

“Nothing that you couldn’t equal. It was delightful of you to come.”

“I was so bored, darling, I felt that if I stayed home another moment I
should go completely out of my mind.”

“Poor thing.” They talked this way with each other, talked with the
casual rudeness of people who have met each other at many parties. He
was an amazing person, thought Mrs Stevanson, looking at him carefully.
He was slim and not very tall, with a pretty feminine face and, except
for the small bitter lines about his mouth, he looked as if he were
still in his twenties. His actual age was unknown. Mrs Stevanson
thought he was forty.

“And whom have we here?” asked Mrs Stevanson, turning to face the small
brown man beside him, a social smile on her face.

“Why, don’t you know ... this is....” He said the name quickly. It was
something foreign and difficult. She would have to call Lewis up the
next day and ask him. She shook hands with the little man and saw that
he was impressed with her. She smiled as George _Robert_ Lewis
explained him. He was a Greek and a professor and he knew a lot about
poetry.

“_But_ Helena, he has the most fabulous philosophy. I really think
it’s never been done before. What was it again, Timon?” Mrs Stevanson
knew his first name now.

“I’m sure Mrs Stevanson wouldn’t be interested.” As a matter of fact
Mrs Stevanson wasn’t interested but she encouraged him.

“I should love to know,” she said. How like an earthenware pot he
looks, she thought as he began to tell her his theory.

“You see it is based on the legend of the Golden Fleece. I have
substituted the artistic ultimate in place of the fleece and, to carry
the myth to its final parallel, I envisage all artists as traveling
upon an Argosy....” She listened politely, carefully to the sound of
the words, ignoring their meanings. She glanced up and down the large
white-paneled room. No one was drunk.

“Isn’t it stimulating?” asked Lewis when the Greek named Timon had
finished.

“Wonderful,” murmured Mrs Stevanson.

The Greek flushed happily. “I don’t think the Argosy’s ever been
interpreted quite that way before.”

“I’m sure it hasn’t,” agreed Mrs Stevanson. She was becoming impatient
now. Her own Argosy would have to begin again. More guests were
arriving.

“Have you seen the new ballet?” asked Lewis suddenly.

“No, I haven’t seemed to have had the time.”

“It’s dreadful. But the boy ...” Lewis made little motions with his
hand, with his mouth, with his body. His eyes glittered their blue
innocence, their cheerful pleasure. He described the boy to her and in
great detail he told her how he was going to arrange a meeting.

“You’re too clever to stay alive, my pet,” said Mrs Stevanson. She
hoped that none of her other guests were overhearing this. Most of them
were quite worldly but a few weren’t and it would never do to have them
hear him.

“I must ...” began Mrs Stevanson moving slowly away.

“So nice to have met you,” said the small Greek named Timon.

“The pleasure ...” murmured Mrs Stevanson.

Lewis waved to her. “I shall see you later, Helena.” Mrs Stevanson
wondered irritably why fairies had to have such unpleasant voices.

Several new arrivals were in the foyer. She recognized Mr Heywood
immediately. He was passively allowing one of the footmen to take his
overcoat away from him.

“Heywood dear, it was so nice of you to come.”

“It’s nice to be here, Helena.” He looked unhappily at the footman,
retreating with the overcoat.

“And where is your lovely wife?” Mrs Stevanson knew perfectly well they
were no longer on speaking terms.

“My wife?” Heywood became dreamy, vague and distant. “Oh, she’s not
well at all.”

“Really? Do tell me what’s wrong. I’ve a very good doctor, you know.”

“It’s nothing, really. She has trouble with her head. I think it’s her
head.”

“Migraine,” said Mrs Stevanson firmly, leading Heywood now into the
drawing room. “I’ve been a martyr to it myself. You know,” and she
lowered her voice, “I think it’s due to change of life.”

“Really, Helena!” Heywood was gently shocked. He made a restraining
motion with his white limp hairless hand. “I’m sure she’s much too
young for that.”

“Well, you never can tell,” said Mrs Stevanson who knew Mrs Heywood’s
exact age.

“What a lot of people,” sighed Heywood. “So many people.”

“There _are_ a lot,” said Mrs Stevanson proudly. “As usual I don’t
know half of them.”

Carefully she cut Mr Heywood away from her, allowed him to float
unprotected through the groups of people. He looked back at her sadly
but she had no pity for him and, finally, a group of Wall Street people
swallowed him up and she saw him no more.

Several people were entering the drawing room. They walked slowly with
the carefully controlled uneasiness of people who didn’t know the
hostess well.

She recognized one of the newcomers and she greeted him joyfully:
Ulysses returned to Ithaca, as the small Greek named Timon might have
said.

The man she knew introduced her to the others. Most of them were
English and she had a great admiration for the English. It was not
particularly fashionable to like them now but she still was fascinated
by them because they could talk without moving their lips. It
_was_ rather wonderful.

“And this,” said the man she knew, “is Mrs Bankton.”

“How do you do,” said Mrs Bankton in a low voice. She was not English;
Mrs Stevanson could tell that right away.

“We’ve met before, I think?” A hint of question was in Mrs Stevanson’s
voice.

“I don’t think we have.”

Mrs Bankton was definitely not English. Her accent was French or
Spanish or Italian. Mrs Stevanson could never tell one from the other.

“Mrs Bankton’s husband is the artist,” said the man she knew slightly.

“Of course,” said Mrs Stevanson wondering who Bankton was. “Certainly,
I know. But you’re not English, my dear?”

“No, madame, I’m not English.” Mrs Bankton smiled at her and made no
further admissions. Mrs Stevanson looked at her with dislike. She
liked to find out about people quickly. Life was too short to have
them hold back important facts and, ultimately, confidences. People
always confided in Mrs Stevanson, knowing that she was not sufficiently
interested in them to repeat what she heard.

“I do hope you’ll enjoy yourself,” said Mrs Stevanson more cordially
than she would have done had she liked the person.

“Thank you,” murmured Mrs Bankton. They bowed slightly to each other
and parted. Mrs Stevanson watched Mrs Bankton as she walked across the
room with her party. She looked very exotic in a short black lace dress
and a red rose in her hair. What slim ankles, thought Mrs Stevanson
disagreeably, thinking of her own heavy legs, practical legs one artist
had told her, voluptuous legs an even better artist had said.

Mrs Stevanson turned, setting a smile on her lips. She faced the
largest of all the groups: over twenty people talking all at once to
each other. Holding her breasts high she approached them and, as she
was recognized, their voices lowered and smiles appeared all about her
and she was accepted into the center of the group and there devoured.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Robert Holton was received by a butler. His coat was taken with
ceremony and he was moved easily out of the black marble foyer into the
drawing room.

He had never visited Mrs Stevanson in her New York apartment. He was
greatly impressed and he tried to retain a mental image of what he
saw: he was constructing a dream world and such an apartment might be
material for it.

The drawing room was large, formal and very light. Three chandeliers
hung from the high ceiling. The walls were paneled in white wood with
gold-leaf decorations, like the palace at Versailles. Paintings hung at
regular intervals about the room: portraits mostly, portraits of Mrs
Stevanson. There was one large painting of a countryside which Robert
Holton could tell immediately was done by Rembrandt or someone like him.

The floor was thickly carpeted and tables and formal chairs furnished
the room. A few people sat; most of them, however, preferred to stand,
to move about gracefully, searching.

He stood blinking in the light, drugged by the high noise of voices,
hypnotized by the odor of many flowers drenched over the women who
stood talking to men.

He walked slowly, uncertainly toward the center of the room. He knew no
one in the room. He looked for familiar faces, though; there were none.
Then he saw Mrs Stevanson and he walked toward her. She looked at him
and he could tell she was puzzled. Then she recognized him; she came
toward him and they met beneath a portrait of her holding lilies.

“You’re little Bob Holton, aren’t you?” A strange description, he
thought.

“Yes, Mrs Stevanson, you remember we met last year and....”

“Of course we did. How _is_ your father?”

“Fine, just fine.” His father hated her.

“I’m so glad to hear that. I think you look more like your mother, you
know. She was such a lovely woman.”

He mumbled thank you.

“Your mother was one of the most charming women I ever knew. She had
such a wonderful way of doing things, so original.” Like marrying my
father, thought Holton. “She was always full of surprises. I used to
enjoy her so much.”

There was an awkward silence. Robert Holton never found it easy to talk
about his mother and Mrs Stevanson had decided, obviously, that it was
the only thing she could discuss with him.

“It was very nice of you ...” began Holton.

“Think nothing of it, my dear. I don’t know if there are many younger
people here. You might look round, though. I suppose you’ll know
everybody. There’s Laura Whitner over there.... You know her of
course.” He looked and saw a dark little woman wearing a skull cap.

“I’ve seen her act,” he said accurately.

“Oh, yes.” Mrs Stevanson looked around the room. He could see that she
was preparing to leave him alone.

He was wrong. “You must,” she said, “meet some friends of mine. They’re
foreigners and they’ve only just arrived. They don’t know anyone....”
She was going to say “either” but did not.

She led him over to a small group of men and women. Mrs Stevanson
didn’t know their names but she acted as if they were her dearest
friends.

“This young man is Robert Holton. His mother was a great friend of mine
and you must be nice to him.” She was cute. “He’s just gotten out of
the navy.” She looked up suddenly with a magnificent gesture, looked
as if someone had hailed her from across the room. “Oh, I have to go!
Please excuse me.” She moved away in a swirl of silk, her bright blue
hair bouncing on the back of her thick white neck.

“How do you do,” said Holton, shaking hands with a dark man. Then he
shook hands with a light man, with a short heavy one, with a thin
blonde girl and finally he shook hands with Mrs Bankton.

“How do you do,” said Robert Holton.

“How do _you_ do,” said Mrs Bankton. Her voice startled him. It
was deep and foreign and she had said the “you” as though she had
really meant him.

“I’m very well,” he said and he looked at her. Her hair was dark. Her
eyes were greenish and bright and shining. He looked at her mouth,
red and curved, elfinly shaped. He stammered, “I know you. I know you
but....”

“But who am I?” She laughed and gestured with her long white hands.

“Yes, who are you?”

“Carla.”

“No!”

“Yes.”

“You’ve changed. I....”

“And so have you. I think you look younger out of uniform.”

“But....”

“You’re surprised to see me? I’m just visiting this country. My
husband,” she paused, “my husband is in England and I think he’ll be
coming to join me soon.”

“Then you’re married?”

“But of course! And very well.” She smiled at him, smiled gently and
he felt embarrassed because she acknowledged an old relationship so
easily; that she was so unmoved, so unguilty.

“I’m very happy to hear that.” He didn’t know what else to say.

“Thank you. Let’s get out of this crowd.” She looked about her. She
pointed to a corner of the room, an alcove containing a window. “Let’s
go over there.” They walked through the crowd and sat down on the love
seat beneath the window.

“You’re surprised, aren’t you?” She spoke softly.

“A little, I guess. I don’t know. I have to get used to the idea. I
always associated you with ... with Florence and....”

“You felt that was behind you?”

He was surprised. She must have known him very well, he thought
suddenly; he had forgotten how well she had known him. “No, I didn’t
think that,” he lied.

“I have very warm memories,” she said lightly.

He blushed and hated himself but there was nothing he could do or say
that would make it better. “Mine were pleasant, too. I ... I liked
Florence quite a bit.”

“Yes, I’m sure you did, and you liked Fiesole, and the nights and
summer days. I suppose you liked them all.”

“I liked them all.”

“And that was what you liked, all that you can remember?”

“No, I _remember_ more. I ... I didn’t know if you’d want to talk
about that; being married and....”

She was surprised. “But I knew you first, after all. That counts for
something and then I remembered, too. It hasn’t been so long.”

“Several years.”

“It doesn’t seem that long to me. You remember those nights at our
place in Fiesole? We used to go out and sit on the ledge and look at
the lights of the city.” They both looked out the window then, looked
at the glacier-bright squares of light.

“It was very pretty.”

“You Anglo-Saxon!” She laughed at him, not maliciously but gaily. “You
say it’s pretty. You say it’s nice. It was beautiful and you know it.
That was a beautiful time.”

He felt her warmth suddenly, began to remember her warmth, began to
remember much that he had forgotten. “Yes,” said he, warmed by her,
“those nights _were_ beautiful.”

“Good, I wanted to hear you say that. I wanted you to say,” her voice
became so low that he could barely hear her, “I wanted you to say much
more but I think you’ve forgotten.” She looked out at the towers of the
city, at the glittering webs of light. She was embarrassed now and he
was not. No, she was not embarrassed; he realized that with a sudden
vision; she was sad and he didn’t want her to be sad.

“You know ... I can say more. I didn’t think you wanted to hear it.
That was so long ago. You’re married and....”

She turned around and faced him, her face alive and gay; her moods
changed so quickly, he remembered: he had always been baffled by her
changes. “You got interested in someone else. I know what you soldiers
are like. Italians are just the same in Italy.”

“No, there isn’t anyone else.” This was the wrong thing to say and he
tried to withdraw the words from the air but they were lost to him now.

“No one else? No one...?”

“Well....”

“How strange.” She looked at a painting of Mrs Stevanson and at that
moment she looked as if this painting were the most important thing to
her. Finally she said, “I think I’d like to drink some whiskey. Shall
we go to the bar?”

“Certainly, Carla.” He was glad that he had said her name naturally.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Carla felt uncertain. The cold glass that a footman had given her
was chilling her hand. She wondered if she should put it down on the
dining-room table. They were standing near it and Robert Holton was
looking hungrily at the food; she could see that in a moment he would
have enough courage to eat.

“What a dreadful room,” said Carla.

“What?” He looked at her as though she had not been there. “Oh, yes,
it’s sort of forbidding.” He glanced at the dark wood-paneled walls and
the ornate chandelier.

“I don’t know why these people must have everything so heavy inside,”
said Carla. “The buildings in New York are so tall and light.”

“Some places are more modern.”

“I suppose they are.” The glass of whiskey in her hand was becoming
much too cold to hold. She put it down on the table.

“You don’t like it?”

“I think I’ve had enough for now. You remember how little I used to
drink.”

“Yes, you never needed it.” He looked at her directly and smiled. She
was happy then because it was the first time he had looked at her eyes.
He was losing his fear of her, this strange and, to her, inexplicable
fear.

“Let’s find some place to sit down,” she said.

“I thought you wanted to walk around.”

She laughed. “All right, we’ll do both.” They walked around.

More people had arrived. Several hundred, thought Carla with distaste.
She liked smaller parties. She had only come tonight because friends of
her husband had insisted. They were keeping close watch over her for
they knew how jealous Bankton was. It was very amusing, she thought
as she and Holton walked from group to group. Her husband’s friends
watching her now would never suspect what had happened in Florence.

They came to an especially large group, a dozen men surrounding Laura
Whitner.

“Do you want to meet her?” asked Carla, looking at Holton, knowing that
he did.

“You don’t know her?”

“But of course. I know everyone.”

They cut their way through the bewitched men, cut through to the
enchantress herself.

Laura Whitner was dark and slight with full breasts. Her face was as
delicate as a carving in ivory; sallow, too, as old ivory. The lips
were brilliant red and she twisted her mouth in childlike expressions
and her sad dark eyes glittered from habit and not from fire. She
looked unwell, thought Carla.

“Carla Bruno!” exclaimed Laura when she saw them. The two women
embraced with warmth and the enchantment was broken for the admirers
and they began to withdraw from the circle of her spell, smiling as
they departed, leaving her alone in her theater with only two admirers.

“But my tiny Carla, what are you doing in New York? I haven’t seen you
for years, not since Paris.”

“I’m here visiting.”

“But I’m so happy to see you! You know, you’re the last person I’d
expect to run into here.”

“I had to get away from Europe. I hadn’t been to America since I was a
child.”

Laura Whitner looked at her hands. “You’re not married, are you?” Carla
wore no wedding ring.

Carla smiled and nodded.

Laura looked astonished, her scarlet mouth, like a wicked child’s,
twisted with all the emotions she felt and several that she did not.
“To whom? To the little one here?” She motioned to Robert Holton who
had been standing silently watching her.

Carla laughed. “No, Laura, to Bankton in England.”

“The painter?”

“The painter. We’ve been married two years.”

“Are you happy?” There was a dark note in her voice as she said this
and Carla could tell that it was something she wanted to know.

“I am not unhappy,” said Carla, knowing that this was no answer but she
hoped that Holton would grasp her meaning.

“I’m sorry,” said Laura Whitner almost undramatically. “I married
again, you know.”

“I heard you did. Is he here tonight? I used to know him.”

“He couldn’t come, he’s working on a show. Are you going to have
children?”

“I don’t think so.”

“I want one.” She sighed and touched the skullcap on her head with a
hand that was pale and like the claw of a bird, a hand that shook. “If
I’m not too old I’m going to make a child. I think that’s what I need.”

“You must be very happy with him.”

She nodded and said with great sincerity, “Yes, I’m very happy now.
After a long time I am.” And Carla looked into her sad dark eyes and
saw that they had not changed expression.

“Who is this?” asked Laura Whitner, turning to Holton, making love to
him automatically with her face.

“This,” said Carla, “is Robert Holton, an old friend of mine. We knew
each other in Florence during the war.”

“Indeed!” She lifted her thin brows and made her mouth very round.
Holton blushed and Carla wanted to protect him.

“I’m very pleased to meet you,” said Holton awkwardly. “I’ve liked you
in the movies.” Carla remembered then his honesty: the thing that had
attracted her to him. He had always been honest; she wondered if that
was so now.

“Have you really, child? Thank you.” She made a gesture that was
intended for an entire audience but it was still very graceful.

“You must,” said Carla, “call me up and we’ll get together. I’m staying
at the Mason.”

“I shall, of course. Tell me....” At this moment Mrs Raymond Stevanson
appeared to capture Laura.

“Laura, darling, I’ve got the most marvelous Estonian who wants to meet
you. I think he said he was an Estonian. I know you’ll love him. You’ll
excuse me, I know.” She said this last to Carla and Holton.

“We’ll have lunch,” said Laura, calling back over her shoulder as she
was borne away by the conquering Mrs Stevanson.

“What did you think of her, Bob?” asked Carla.

“She’s not as pretty as I thought she’d be.”

“They never are; you must learn that.”

He looked at her and she tried to tell what he was thinking but for
once her intuition was not enough: she had first to examine the years
that had gone by. She had to find some trace of familiar emotion in
him. She had to rediscover the stranger. She had to make him remember
what she remembered. In Florence he had loved her, she was sure of
that. Now it was up to her to reconstruct a passion that had never been
wholly lost. She had cared more for him than he had known then; would
ever know, she hoped. There had been so many nights after he had left
when she had longed to be with him, nights when she could feel again
the warm summer about them as they lay together in the wide bed in her
room. She was determined now to find the lover in the stranger that
stood beside her, who stood looking seriously but remotely into her
face.

“Shall we sit down now, Bob?”

                   *       *       *       *       *

People were beginning to leave. It was eight-thirty and Mrs Stevanson
was glad to see them go. The first two hours were interesting and then
she found herself bored.

On the other hand George _Robert_ Lewis was not bored. He was
slightly drunk and enjoying himself very much. He was usually overcome
by a monstrous _ennui_ during the day which, as evening came, grew
less and less. In a few more hours he would have discovered a reason
for living and this would keep him happy until he woke up the next
morning with a hang-over.

He was glad when he heard that the famous Bankton’s wife was at the
party. She had been pointed out to him but he hadn’t met her yet.
He stopped a waiter and took a cocktail from him. And, equipped for
conversation with a woman, he marched across the drawing room to where
Carla stood talking with a young man, a rather nice young man, thought
Lewis.

“Mrs Bankton?”

She turned and looked at him and he rather liked her brown-green eyes.

“Yes?” She looked at him as though she wanted him to go away. Lewis was
sensitive to such things but not particularly nonplussed; in fact he
was accustomed to being asked to go away.

“I’m George _Robert_ Lewis ... you know _Regarde_, the
_avant garde_ magazine, only it’s so trite now to call anything
_avant garde_. You must have seen it. We did the most splendid
article on Bankton last year. I’ve just loved his work because I can
feel what he’s trying to do: post-surrealism and all that sort of
thing. I’m all for it; in fact, we’re all for people like Bankton who
do things. I just felt I couldn’t help but come over and say hello.”

She smiled at him very nicely. “I’ve heard of you, Mr Lewis. My husband
thinks very highly of what your magazine is doing.”

“He does? Oh, but isn’t that simply marvelous! I always felt I would be
most sympathetic with the great Bankton. Tell me, darling, when do you
expect him in this country?”

She took the “darling” quite well, he thought.

“I’m not sure. I think in a month or so. He’s so busy in London.” “By
the way”, she said, “I want you to meet an old friend of mine, Robert
Holton.”

“Very pleased to meet you, Mr Lewis,” said the young man as they shook
hands.

“_Enchanté_,” said Lewis, bowing from the waist and allowing his
hand to stay too long in Holton’s. Such a nice young man, thought
Lewis, and wondered if....

“What,” said Carla, “is _Regarde_ espousing now?” She spoke
quickly and Lewis could see that she understood him and this pleased
him although, in a sense, they were rivals.

“As always: the advanced, the revolutionary....”

“And the honest?”

“But of course, darling, we are never consciously dishonest, though it
_is_ hard sometimes not being.”

“Perhaps in life but not in art.” She spoke severely. She was a Latin;
he could tell now from her accent.

“You’re not English?” He changed the subject.

“No, I’m a Florentine.”

“But how charming! I have always loved Florence. I spent several
summers there when I was a boy. Let me see ... I was there last in
19.... It’s not important. How I loved those doors, though!”

He saw that the young man named Robert Holton was beginning to look
bored and Lewis hated above all else to be thought a bore even by a
bore.

“And _you_ have been to Florence?”

Holton nodded.

Carla said, “That was where we met the first time. He’s an old friend
of our family’s.”

“How droll that must’ve been for you, finding this charming boy here
at Helena Stevanson’s who, though I love her dearly, gives the dullest
parties in New York.”

“They _are_ dull. I wonder why people come. Why do you come?”

“I’m a creature in constant need of companionship. I go to everything.
I _must_ see a lot of people or I become most dreadfully morbid
and then I write poems.”

She smiled. “I remember you used to write some good poems.”

He laughed, pleased. “You remember then? That was so long ago. I
somehow have gotten all out of the habit.”

“Perhaps you see too many people.”

“That may be right and, speaking of people, you lovely ones must have
dinner with me this evening, otherwise I must eat alone; I’ve been
deserted today by everyone.”

“I’m afraid,” said Carla, “that we can’t....”

“That’s not a bad idea,” said Holton much to Lewis’s surprise--to
Carla’s surprise, too. Lewis looked at her and saw she was surprised.
He was amused, wickedly amused. There was something between them.

“You must really join me. I know of the most interesting place in the
Village. I know you’ll love it.”

“Don’t you want to go?” asked Holton, looking at Carla.

“Why....” She didn’t know what to say.

“Certainly you’ll come; three is good company.”

Carla gestured uncertainly with her hands.

“Perhaps I’d better come back in a moment,” said Lewis, smiling
maliciously at Carla. “I so hope I’m not upsetting plans.” He made
bowing movements and retreated into the center of the party.

As he withdrew he could see the long look Carla gave the young man.

                   *       *       *       *       *

The men from Wall Street bored Mr Heywood. He tried to act like them
but from time to time he could not help implying gently to them that he
was a broker through heredity, not inclination. It was so much easier
doing what his father had done than to do something else or nothing at
all. He had a puritanical horror of doing nothing. His family had made
him believe that it was necessary always to work and he rather liked
the work, too. It made him think less about his own uniquely miserable
life.

His wives were a large part of the general dreariness of his life. He
never seemed to marry the right women. They either wanted his money
or wanted to dominate him. He was used to domination by now but it
made him uneasy sometimes to feel that his own will was so easily bent
by others. He was always making stands, erecting firm barriers, but
somehow the barriers usually collapsed. He wondered sometimes if he
shouldn’t collect stamps or have a hobby like that.

Thinking of this, he began now to divorce himself from the group of
Wall Street people. He promised to have lunch with one, to call up
another; he bowed to a third, shook hands with a fourth and then he
floated softly away, a look of quiet happiness on his face: he was now
alone in the midst of a party.

Mr Heywood looked about him to see if there was anyone he might like
to talk to. He would prefer some young woman who looked lonely. His
three wives had all looked lonely at one period of the courtship and
he had married them as much for this corresponding loneliness as for
anything else. He had been mistaken three times but he was, in general,
an optimist.

There seemed to be no lonely-looking young women. He sighed and was
about to leave the party when he saw Robert Holton. He remembered him
clearly; he was proud of his memory. Now he would have to speak to him.
It would be difficult, but then he had always been taught that if a
thing was particularly unpleasant it should be done: character was made
in this fashion and character was more important than anything else. He
proceeded to mould his character. He walked toward Robert Holton.

Mr Heywood approached Holton from behind and he could overhear his
conversation with a dark pretty woman.

Holton was saying, “I think it might be interesting. After all, Carla,
I don’t get out much and if a person like Lewis wants us to go I think
we should.”

“If you want to, Bob.” She was a foreigner, thought Mr Heywood with
interest. “I’d hoped we might have had dinner together and try to ...
to talk of.... I’m not saying this well, I’m sorry.”

“No, Carla....” Mr Heywood drifted between them now.

“Mr Holton?” he asked.

“Oh, Mr Heywood! How do you do, sir?” Robert Holton was impressed as
always with Mr Heywood’s greatness and this both saddened and pleased
Mr Heywood.

“I had thought ...” began Mr Heywood in a barely audible voice.

“This,” said Holton quickly on top of Mr Heywood’s words, “is Mrs
Bankton, an old friend of mine. Mr Heywood.”

The meeting was made and Mr Heywood was rather attracted to this pretty
girl who spoke English so beautifully and yet with an accent.

“I thought I should find you here, Mr Holton. Mrs Stevanson was telling
me about you.”

“That was nice of her.”

“She is a charming woman,” said Mr Heywood, praising an absent person
about whom they all cared very little; it filled the first awkwardness
of a meeting such as this. “You enjoy being downtown?” He was careful
not to associate himself with Holton’s job.

“Oh, very much,” said Holton.

“By the way,” asked the dark pretty woman, “what are you doing now? You
haven’t told me.”

Holton flushed and Mr Heywood was sorry for him. “I’m working in a
brokerage office.”

She laughed. “But how dreadful that must be.”

Holton looked miserable and Mr Heywood, who rather agreed with her,
laughed. “It’s not too terrible, Mrs Bankton. Some of us manage to
survive it. I think a sense of humor is the most important thing.”

“I’m sorry,” she said. “I had no idea you were also in the same
situation.”

How delightful she was, thought Mr Heywood. “We must all,” said Mr
Heywood in a voice that was like the sigh of a dying man, “do our
appointed tasks. Duty is of such great importance: it is the only
tangible thing in the chaos of living.”

“But I don’t think that’s so at all,” said Carla as gently as he but
with less resignation. “One should always try to do what one wants to
do.”

“In spite of one’s duty to others?”

“People that you love?”

“No, that I ... that one admires and respects.”

“And this makes you happy?”

“Are any of us happy?” asked Heywood in a voice of weary sadness; he
stopped, suddenly remembering that young Holton was there. It would
never do for him to hear these things.

“I talked,” he said casually, “with Murphy about you today. He seemed
most enthusiastic.”

“That’s nice. I like working with him.”

“Perhaps,” said Mr Heywood, looking at a spot somewhere over Holton’s
head, “perhaps you would be interested in working in the jobs that, ah,
come in contact with the public.” He could not say selling: he tried
but he could not. He wondered if maybe a long trip to South America
would give him a new perspective.

“I think that would be wonderful!” Holton was moved as he should be.
An affable young man, thought Mr Heywood who, as a rule, did not like
men at all, especially young men who seemed to be able to get all the
lonely young women they wanted.

“Perhaps,” murmured Mr Heywood, “something can be arranged in the near
future.” He looked at the dark woman beside Holton and he thought her
an unusually real person to find in such a place as this. She was
probably not real, though: only an illusion with long white hands and
silvery nails. He was used to women vanishing.

George _Robert_ Lewis appeared and Mr Heywood experienced a slight
spasm of nausea. He found Lewis hard to be with. Mr Heywood would not
have said that being a broker was a productive life but if, to be an
artist, it was necessary to be like Lewis he had no desire to be an
artist.

“How do you do?” said Lewis, bowing very low and smirking at him.

“And how are you?” inquired Mr Heywood politely, beginning to retreat
slowly.

“Doing marvelously. These charming people here are dining with me,
aren’t you?”

Carla looked uncertain and Holton nodded. Mr Heywood wondered where
Holton had run across Lewis.

“I’m really,” said Lewis in a conspiratorial voice (an old woman’s
voice, thought Mr Heywood, frowning slightly), “just doing a job. Her
husband is one of our idols and I may get a perfectly marvelous essay
out of her. I knew his work so well.” Mr Heywood wondered vaguely why
Lewis was explaining so many things.

“I see,” said Mr Heywood. He turned to Carla. “Delighted to have met
you.” He nodded to Holton. “I shall probably see you tomorrow.”

“Yes, sir; good night, sir.” Mr Heywood glided away toward the door.

Mrs Stevanson appeared beside him just as he had made up his mind to
leave.

“Do cheer up, Heywood. You look so petulant!”

“I’m not really, Helena, not really.”

“I’m not so sure. Who’re you looking at?” He glanced away quickly but
she saw that he had been watching Carla. “Lovely, isn’t she? I’m afraid
she’s stuck with that Holton boy and, my Lord, George _Robert’s_
got her, too. The poor child and ...” Mrs Stevanson was surprised. “I
do think they’re leaving!”

“After all,” said Heywood soothingly, “it _is_ a cocktail party.
They probably weren’t able to find you.”

“I suppose you’re right, Heywood. Manners change so. She looked rather
unhappy, I thought.”

“Who?”

“Mrs. Bankton.”

“Really. I didn’t notice.”

“I don’t suppose you did; men don’t notice very many things anyway,”
said Mrs Stevanson, suddenly exhibiting her bitterness. She controlled
herself quickly. “Except men like you, Heywood dear.”

“Thank you, Helena.” He bowed without movement; he suggested a bow
without actually executing it. “Now I must really be going.”

“So soon, Heywood, so soon?”




                            _Chapter Ten_


Carla was angry with Robert Holton, angrier still with George
_Robert_ Lewis. She had hoped to have dinner alone with Holton.
She wanted time to recover a past emotion and now she would have very
little time. As they drove through the lighted streets she looked with
dislike at Lewis’s smooth boyish face.

None of them spoke after they got into the cab outside Mrs Stevanson’s
place. Lewis had given the driver an address and they had relaxed, each
thinking of different things: Holton pleased to be seeing life; Lewis
pleased to have secured the wife of a great figure; Carla displeased
with the arrangement, Carla plotting murder.

Robert Holton sat in the middle. Carla had decided that if she had to
spend an evening with Lewis she at least wouldn’t sit next to him.

She looked at Holton as they drove down Seventh Avenue. He was looking
straight ahead. His well-formed, not very strong mouth was set in a
straight line; he was trying to be firm now; he was trying to convince
her that he was right in accepting Lewis’s invitation for them.

She sighed loudly so that she would be heard and understood. Then
she looked out the window and examined the neon signs that broke the
darkness with many colors. She liked the lights.

The taxicab stopped on a side street where a dozen or more signs
advertised night clubs. They got out and Lewis paid the driver.

“Where is it?” asked Holton, looking about him.

Lewis pointed to some steps. “Right down there. I suppose it’s open;
you know, there was some talk that the police might close it but I
don’t think they will. Shall we go in?”

Carla could see that Holton was wondering what he meant when he said
that the police might close it. She understood herself and she was
rather pleased now: it would be a lesson for him, an experience that he
needed.

Lewis led them down the steps and into the night club.

There were two large rooms: one light and garish, with a long bar, many
mirrors and booths; the other was darker, with tables and, at one end,
a small band on a small stage. They went into the darker room. The
headwaiter recognized Lewis and was very polite to him; he showed them
to a table near the stage.

“Isn’t this charming?” asked Lewis. “I think it has a wonderful
atmosphere.” He grinned at Carla. She nodded.

“It’s not too garish,” she said. “So many American places are too
light.”

“Do they have a floor show?” asked Holton.

“A very unusual one,” said Lewis, giggling. “I’m sure you’ll think
it great fun. Hermes de Bianca is the star of the show and his dance
is perfectly magnificent. He is one of the great artists, great
interpretive artists, I mean.”

“Is that right?”

A waiter came to take their order. He was a curious-looking waiter, a
type which Carla recognized but Holton did not. He wore no uniform. She
looked around the room and found that none of the others wore uniforms.
They were dressed casually. This waiter’s hair was long, unpleasantly
long and the front of it had been carefully bleached. He was thin and
moved stiffly, self-consciously, like a woman thinking of rape. On one
of his fingers he wore a large ring with a bizarre stone in it.

“What do you people want?” His voice was irritable and high. He was
looking interestedly at Holton who was looking just as interestedly at
him.

“I’d love something to drink,” said Lewis. “How about the rest of you?”

The waiter looked at Lewis for the first time. His face brightened.
“George, it’s you! How lovely to see you! You haven’t been here in such
a long time.”

“I’ve been dreadfully busy,” said Lewis coldly, disengaging himself
from the waiter’s assumed relationship.

“I think,” said Holton, “that I’d like a highball.” They all decided
to have the same thing and the waiter, with a slight toss of his head,
walked away.

The small band was playing loudly and eagerly. One sentimental modern
song after another was catapulted into the room. Fortunately, after
several minutes the band stopped playing and the musicians departed.

“I’m glad they’re gone,” said Carla. “They make too much music.”

“They aren’t very delicate.” Lewis turned suddenly to Holton. “And you,
what do you do?”

Holton flushed. “Well, I work in a brokerage house.”

Lewis’s eyebrows went up and he elaborately showed surprise and
disbelief. “But how remarkable! You’re not an artist! Surely you must
do something wonderful. You have the hands of an artist. You’re just
working there because you have to. That’s it, isn’t it?”

“No, that’s not it.” Carla admired his courage. “I don’t mind working
there and it’s probably going to be my career.” His jaw got very firm.
She liked him this way.

“How marvelous!” exclaimed Lewis. “A contented Babbitt.” He stopped.
“What a dreadful thing to say: that’s such a Nineteen-Twenty phrase.
Really, I sometimes wonder if art is the answer to our problems.”

“I think it might be to the artist,” said Carla softly.

Lewis bowed. “_Touché_, my dear. Let’s say the dedication to art,
the freedom from conventions. Perhaps this young man’s view is the
saner: to accept the pattern.” He was mocking now but he did not show
it in his face.

“Some things you have to accept,” said Holton, aware of Lewis’s
mockery. “Sometimes there is nothing else.”

“There is always something else,” said Lewis decidedly.

“I think that’s right,” said Carla.

“What?” asked Holton. “What else can you do but that?”

“Run away,” said Lewis.

“Fall in love,” said Carla.

But neither solution was convincing to Holton and Carla could think of
no way to explain herself. There seemed, at the moment, no words to
record her meaning, no bridge to reach him. They were all three quiet,
thinking of questions and answers.

Finally their silence killed the problem and they began to notice the
room they were in and the other people. The people at the different
tables were not, generally, mixed. Several women would sit at one
table and several men would sit at another. Around the room were small
tables for two and here men sat with men and women with women. This was
puzzling to Holton, she could see. He said nothing, though, and she
had a great sudden ache of tenderness for him, a desire to protect his
innocence. But this she could not do. She was a stranger to him and he
had forgotten.

Cigarette smoke veiled the room bluely and everything seemed tenuous
and unreal. The sound of voices and ice clattering, of forks striking
plates and of many people moving and breathing together made an
ocean-like roar in Carla’s ears. The room was hot and the smell of
perfume was strong.

The band returned and began to play. They played much more softly than
they had before and she was grateful. Conversation was not difficult
when the music was soft. In fact, the music seemed to underline many
things, made emotional statements dramatic. Unfortunately, with George
_Robert_ Lewis sitting at the table there was no opportunity
to make emotional statements. He would have to leave. She began to
concentrate on this as they talked now of trivial things. Finally he
received her subconscious message. He stood up.

“I hope you’ll excuse me a moment but I have to go backstage. I’ll only
be gone a minute.” He left quickly, going around the stage and behind
the crimson curtain.

“He’s a funny little queer, isn’t he?” commented Holton.

“He’s one of the great aesthetes. You’re glad you came tonight?”

“It’s interesting,” he said. He was defending himself now.

“This is a very ...” she paused, trying to think of the right word,
“trivial world. I don’t think you’ll like it.”

“Perhaps I will. I used to be something of a sculptor.” He said this
laughing, and she could see that he was quite serious.

“Then why don’t you do it?”

“I wasn’t good enough. I haven’t done any since I was in college.”

“Would you like to do it?”

“I don’t think so.” She couldn’t tell whether he meant this or not.

The waiter came and put their glasses down on the table with a look of
boredom; in fact, he yawned slightly as he did it. He tried to catch
Holton’s eye but failed. Sulkily he walked away.

“I don’t want this,” said Carla, pointing to the glass.

“I’ll take it,” said Holton and he began to drink his own, his teeth
making clicking sounds as the ice bobbed against them.

“You like what you’re doing now?” asked Carla.

He put the glass down and frowned. “I suppose I do. I have to do it and
so I figure I might as well like it.”

“Perhaps you might find something you like better.”

“What?”

“You might be a sculptor again.”

He laughed. “I’m really no good. I can’t do anything else but this. I
don’t see anything wrong with what I’m doing, anyway.”

“There’s nothing wrong with it if you’re happy; are you?” He didn’t
answer for a moment. Then he said, “I suppose I am.”

“But you’re not in love?”

“What has that to do with it?”

“So many things,” said Carla, and she did not look at him; she avoided
his eyes. He did not understand. She could see that now. The desire,
however, to make him destroy his barriers, to come alive, was becoming
an obsession with her. And then, of course, he had been the first man
she had known and that made him important to her. She had never lost
her feeling for him and she was sad to see him confused; Carla thought
of herself as Joan of Arc: helping the king to his throne. She was not
yet sure, however, that the king wished to reign.

The music was becoming soft and sentimental. Full round chords gushed
around them and people danced on the stage. Men danced with women and
women with men for there was not really much courage among these people.

“Would you like to dance?” asked Holton.

“Not right now.”

He was not disappointed. She watched him as he watched the other people
in the room. This was something new for him. She guessed that he was
shocked by the people he saw at the different tables. He showed nothing
in his face, though. Perhaps he did not recognize them, did not know
them the way she did: she who had married one of them.

“It’s been quite a while, hasn’t it?” said Holton finally.

“Yes, but I haven’t forgotten any of it, have you?”

“Of course not. Naturally I didn’t know whether you wanted to talk
about it. I figured that ... well, after you married Bankton you
wouldn’t want to think about what we did.”

“I don’t,” said Carla, “love Bankton.”

He was shocked and she knew that she had said the right thing if in the
wrong manner.

“But you got married,” said Holton.

She nodded. “I’m afraid I didn’t know very much about him then. I went
to London after the war was over and I stayed with some artists there.
I met him and he made love to me. I thought he was very wonderful. I
had heard stories about him: that he was ... was like these people
here.” She gestured to include the room. “I didn’t believe the stories.
I married him. I found he wanted me for camouflage.”

“Why don’t you divorce him then?”

“Perhaps I shall someday. It seems so much trouble, though. He’s really
a very nice person.”

Holton shook his head, confused. “I don’t see ... I don’t see why he
married you in the first place if he was....”

“He could still like me, Bob.”

“I don’t see how.”

She smiled. “It _is_ hard to explain but anyway you know now that
I don’t feel too deeply about him. You understand this?”

“I suppose so,” said Robert Holton. He _is_ beginning to
understand, thought Carla, happy now: her words had begun to build the
bridge between them. Soon they would meet again.

“You’ve certainly had a funny life,” said Holton, smiling.

“Sometimes I think so but then the most important thing is making
a freedom for oneself. When that’s done nothing is strange because
everything is natural. You know what I mean?”

He nodded. “Sometimes I know.”

She picked up a fork and drew pictures on the white tablecloth. “I want
you to be free,” she said.

“Free from what?”

“You know. From your routine and morals: the things you don’t want.”

He laughed. “You know pretty well what my set of morals is and I don’t
mind the routine so much.”

“I think you do.”

“Why?”

“Why did you want to come here with Lewis tonight? Why are you with me
now?”

He smiled. “Perhaps you’re partly right. I was curious and I do get
bored and....”

“And you’re alone.” She spoke for him.

He finished his drink and did not answer her; there was no need to
answer her.

“Are you glad,” she asked at last, “are you glad to see me again?”

He said that he was. He declared that he was. He made an issue of
it. He was still not at ease with her and she felt desperate. It was
like a battle between them; first one side retreating and the other
advancing.... Or perhaps a hunt. She was the hunter and her memories
the pursued. She knew that beneath his many assumed faces there was the
person she had known in Florence. Deliberately Carla began to smash the
faces.

                   *       *       *       *       *

George _Robert_ Lewis had a very pleasant interview with de
Bianca, the star; after a half-hour, though, he was beginning to get
restless. Dancers seldom talked about anything interesting. Finally he
excused himself, saying that his guests were waiting for him.

They were talking quietly and intimately when he got back to the table.
He took a secret pleasure in interrupting them. Lewis had already
decided that they were lovers.

“I’m so dreadfully sorry that I went off and left you the way I did. It
was stupid of me but I got so involved with Hermes and his amours: he
tells me all about them and though they’re really quite dull I have to
be polite and listen. Have you ordered yet?”

They said that they had not. Lewis immediately became noisily
efficient. He ordered the languid waiter about, gave him careful
instructions and ignored his glances and meaningful gestures. Lewis
never had liked this type at all. The ones like this waiter never
seemed to have any respect for him. They couldn’t understand the
principles for which he stood. They were not artists.

The dinner finally ordered, he turned toward his guests, a
white-toothed smile on his slightly rouged lips (Hermes had lent him
rouge).

“Are you adoring the atmosphere, my dear Mrs Bankton? It’s nothing to
compare with Paris, of course, but you must admit that it’s a lot gayer
than Rome. I love Rome and usually have a marvelous time there but
somehow one never seems to find the same easy atmosphere that we have
here.”

“No, it is not like Rome,” agreed Carla. What wonderful golden skin she
has, thought Lewis, enjoying her aesthetically. He didn’t dislike women
the way many of his friends did. He felt, in fact, most compatible with
them.

“Are there many places like this in New York?” asked Holton. Lewis was
pleased that he had caught on. Lewis, always optimistic, wondered if it
might not be possible to make some sort of an arrangement.... It was
not impossible, certainly.

“Oh, quite a few, quite a few. They _are_ rather charming from
time to time. I enjoy visiting them and I do feel that the atmosphere
is not uncongenial.” He wondered if perhaps he hadn’t been using the
word “atmosphere” too much.

“I’ve heard about these places,” said Holton without much expression.

“Surely you don’t disapprove?” Lewis was intent on discovering this
now. He could see that Carla was uneasy. Holton was unsatisfactory,
though.

“I don’t care much one way or the other,” he said and he turned to
Carla and began to talk to her again. Lewis, disappointed, listened to
them as they talked of Fiesole.

Lewis was not quite sure what their relationship was. As they talked he
gathered that she was more interested than he in continuing it. That
was usually the case, however. Young men like Holton were apt to be a
little unfeeling, a little stuffy. George _Robert_ Lewis thought
pleasantly of young men.

When he felt that they had talked too long without him, he interrupted.
“When were you last in Fiesole?” He looked at Carla, intending the
question for her; it was difficult not having a name to call her.

She looked at him as though she had forgotten him completely. “In
Fiesole? I was there just a year ago.”

“I suppose it’s pretty well recovered from the war. I told you how I
used to love visiting there before the war. I hope it will always be
pleasant.”

“I think it will,” said Carla.

“Europe must’ve been very nice before the war,” said Holton.

George _Robert_ Lewis made an elaborate motion to show just what
it had been before the war; as he was finishing his movement the waiter
brought them their dinner: a number of dishes with filet of sole at the
center.

“I hope you enjoy it,” said the waiter spitefully, putting the dishes
down loudly and angrily. He walked away, his duty done.

Lewis sighed. “These dreadful waiters, they presume so. I suppose that
it’s all a part of the American dream. Shall we begin?” Like a priest
of a pagan cult he began to perform the ritual of arranging plates, of
removing covers, of neatly moving food from plate to plate, and finally
of eating. The others imitated him.

“When,” asked Robert Holton, after the main part of the dinner had been
eaten, “will the show start?”

Lewis put down his fork carefully, swallowed, and said, “Very soon,
I think. What time is it?” There was an examination of watches:
ten-fifteen. “The show starts at ten-thirty. I hope you’re not
impatient. The audience is very often as interesting as the show. But I
must say that de Bianca’s dance is in another world and that we mustn’t
miss it. I’ll be very curious to know how you react.”

“There used to be a place in Paris like this where they had a wonderful
dancer of the same type. I suppose he’s the type of dancer I think he
is?” said Carla.

“He is quite probably the sort of dancer you think he is,” said Lewis,
smiling, excluding Holton from his words. “The only difference is
that he is a great artist, interpretive artist, I mean. I know you’ll
appreciate him.”

A group of people who knew Lewis came over to their table. They acted
most respectfully and he hoped that Carla and Holton were noticing what
an important person he was. He spoke nicely to them, shook hands with
them, and let them know that he was busy. They left him then, smiling.
Smiling himself, he turned to Carla and Holton and he was disappointed
to find them talking together again. Holton had taken Carla’s hand in
his and Lewis felt a strange anguish, felt an inward betrayal. He did
not know what had been betrayed, however.

“I’m sorry, my dear, that I didn’t introduce you to those people. It
was rude of me because they _all_ admire your husband’s work.”

“That’s perfectly all right,” said Carla. “I know so little about his
work. I’m only a layman, you know.”

“I can hardly believe that. You must’ve been an artist yourself at one
time.”

She shook her head. “No, I was never an artist at anything. Except at
living, perhaps.” Trumpets sounded loudly from the band, giving her
statement an absurd grandeur. She sensed this and laughed. “I wish to
say that I try to make my life a complete thing.”

“But what a marvelous thing to want to do! All of us try that but when
we fail at it (and alas we most of us fail) then we must find ourselves
a medium to guard our egos, to protect our fears.”

“That’s for the talented, Mr Lewis, but for the rest of us, the
majority, only our lives count. We must make them natural.”

“And that,” said Robert Holton suddenly, “is for the rich to do. The
rest of us can’t even do that.”

“How delightful!” exclaimed Lewis. “We have here the three
representatives of humanity: the rich and ... free? the poor and
trapped, and the artist who is finding both freedom and an opiate. But
how wonderfully symbolic! We’re practically an allegory. I suppose we
can reach some understanding.”

“How?” asked Holton and Lewis could see that he was asking Carla, not
him. “How can you get what you want without money? I don’t see how you
can ever do what you want if you aren’t free.”

“I think,” said Carla, “that you can become free. You can get free in
art and you can get free in love. Money hasn’t much to do with it. You
can’t go anywhere alone. I don’t think it’s possible to be sane alone,
without love.”

“I think you’re right,” said Lewis sincerely and sadly, allowing
the now soft music to dissolve his mind into an emotional waste out
of which, of course, came art. “I think you have explained all the
tragedies in the world.”

“And all the happiness,” murmured Carla, looking at Holton. Holton
smiled then. It was the first time that Lewis had seen him smile and he
was struck by the gentleness and beauty of his face. He was beginning
to see the person under the rather rigid mask and he understood now
why this quite wonderful woman was in love. Holton was about to say
something when the band made a crescendo and the lights on the stage
went up. The show was about to begin.

                   *       *       *       *       *

A slender little man, ineptly painted, appeared on the stage and
welcomed the audience to the night club.

He then motioned and the lights in the room went out leaving only the
stage with its curtain backdrop lighted. The band began to play a
current song and the master of ceremonies proceeded to sing, using new
dirty lyrics which made the audience laugh. He then told a joke about
fairies. The audience laughed loudly at this, reveling in exposure;
often their masks became too tight, too heavy. He removed them.

Finished with his joke, he bowed and several persons came onto the
stage. They were probably men. They wore dresses and several of them
had faces of great beauty. They danced, parodying women, transcending
the single sex. And in the audience people looked at one another and
nodded and looked again at the stage, smiles on their faces.

When their dance was finished they left. There was much noise from the
audience.

Then a thin young man swayed onto the stage, took the microphone in his
hands and sang a sexual funny song.

“Who is that?” asked Carla, turning to Lewis.

“Our waiter, darling,” whispered Lewis; “all the performers are
waiters, too. Isn’t it exciting?”

Carla said nothing. Lewis looked at Holton. There was little light in
the room and he couldn’t make out his expression. Holton was sitting
motionless, one hand on the table, one hand touching Carla’s.

Their waiter was so well received that he sang another song.

More dancers appeared. This time they were real women and the men who
came out with them were dressed as men. They did a serious near-ballet
but, because they didn’t know how to dance very well and because they
didn’t particularly care, the dance was funny and Holton laughed. Lewis
and Carla didn’t laugh: for different reasons.

Suddenly in the middle of the dance a voice off stage announced loudly,
“Jerry!” and a girl dressed in a fake tiger skin ran onto the stage.
The audience whistled and stamped and a table of girls near the stage
applauded hysterically. The girl’s face was square and smooth and hard,
without expression. Her body was strong and slim and startlingly white.
One shoulder and most of one breast were bare.

She moved in a stylized jungle fashion among the other dancers who
ran from her, simulating fear as they did. Finally she was left alone
on the stage. She danced then, showing as much of her hard white body
as she could. Her face never changed expression, however. She always
looked straight ahead without smiling, her square face rigid.

And, at last, as a climax, she unfastened the tiger skin and with a
quick gesture pulled it off and for a moment let the audience see her
white hard body. Then the lights went off and she disappeared as the
women in the audience shrieked their delight and the men, catching some
of the hysteria, applauded loudly.

The lights came on again and the stage was empty. The band played
uncompelling music. “What,” asked Lewis, turning to Holton, “did you
think of her? Isn’t she a perfect savage?”

“No, I don’t think she is,” said Holton seriously. “I don’t think she
was good at all, did you?”

“Why, yes, I thought she had something. A certain ... how shall I say
... banked fire?”

“I agree with Bob,” said Carla. “I don’t think she’s a savage; I don’t
think she’s natural.”

“Just prejudice,” said Lewis lightly, gesturing with his hand. “Just
prejudice; anyway, the girls here love her.” He pointed to a table of
women. The dancer, wearing a dressing gown now, was sitting on the lap
of one.

Holton chuckled.

“What amuses you?” asked Lewis but Holton wouldn’t answer him.

Carla told them of a dancer in Paris, like this dancer, and as she
talked the lights went off in the room and the band began to play.
Suddenly a spotlight was turned upon the stage and the room became
quiet as the people waited to see the thing they had heard of, the
thing they had come to see.

Softly the orchestra played.

A boy with blond curling hair and a smooth white face walked onto
the stage, turned his back to the audience, and hung a round silver
moon from a hook attached to the low ceiling. He stood back a moment,
looking at the moon, and then, satisfied that it was right, he stepped
off the small stage and sat down on a bench near the wings.

The silver moon shone dully, dominating the stage and the room. In the
middle of the moon there was a mask: a painted mask, enticing, sexual,
ambiguous, a youth or a woman. From this mask long veils of pink and
blue silk quivered gently, stirred by the now-excited breathing of the
audience. They watched this mask and, watching, waited for the dance to
begin.

A voice came startlingly into the room from a loud-speaker. Said the
voice: “We take great pride in introducing the star of our show, the
one and only Hermes de Bianca. To the music of a Tschaikovsky concerto
he will do a dance symbolic of the struggle between the material and
the spiritual natures of man. Introducing MR HERMES DE BIANCA!”

The band began to play the concerto. More lights, multicolored lights,
were turned upon the stage. The veils of the moon fluttered and Hermes
de Bianca entered.

A long sigh came from the audience as he appeared and began to dance.

He wore a thin silk costume, mysterious and black, with flowing
sleeves. He was fat, not grossly fat like a man, but rather the plump
voluptuousness of an old belle; his skin shone white through the
semi-transparent costume.

His hips were heavy and feminine. His hands and feet were tiny; he was
very proud of them, for he gestured with his hands and pirouetted on
the tips of his dainty feet. His breasts were the breasts of a woman.

Methodically he danced. With an obscene grace he moved about the stage,
moved like a yielding woman exulting in her passivity.

His face:

There are the faces of men and there are the faces of women and there
are also the faces of children, but this was yet another face.

The skin was smooth and silken-looking. The face was beautiful;
his eyes were widened with paint and across the upper eyelids rows
of shining, diamond-like stones were glued, making his slightest
expression glitter in the light.

As he danced he would touch his hair from time to time, using the most
common of feminine gestures. His hair was dark and oiled, with an
artificial peak over the forehead. And, most striking of all, streaks
of gray had been painted at the temples.

The music then became sad and, as it did, his dance became slower,
more sensual. His wide painted mouth was never still, always working,
always moist, the lips never without expression; now parted, showing
desire, now petulant, now commanding, always enticing young men to love.

He moved with great lightness, handling his heaviness gracefully as he
advanced upon the moon, making love to the mask.

Then, as the music became louder, more compelling, he whirled and
twisted among the veils of the moon, wrapping himself in them,
surrendering to the mask, approaching and retreating, always attracted
to the painted mask.

But, finally, he was the one conquered, the one who surrendered, the
passive one. And he stood there, the sounds of music all about him,
engulfing him, his back arched, his head thrown back and his plump
white stomach shuddering beneath the dark material of his costume.

And then, as the music reached a climax, he whirled in the center of
the stage, violent, obscene in a desire to be possessed.

The music stopped.

There was silence in the room--no sound save the unheard thundering
of many quick-beating hearts. The ones who understood were too moved
to speak and the ones who did not understand were embarrassed and
sickened, aware of their danger, and afraid.

He bowed to the audience now, his moist red mouth smiling brilliantly,
the mouth of an actress awaiting applause. The applause came,
destroying the silence in the room, creating another less frightening
mood, replenishing his ego.

Smiling, he walked in triumph off the stage.

The lights were turned on at last and the orchestra played a popular
song.

The boy took down the silver moon and the painted mask and as he walked
away he took the reality of the dream with him and couples began to
dance on the stage where Hermes de Bianca had danced. Yet as they
danced, close to one another, there was a certain fear within each of
them, an uncertainty and a dread.

                   *       *       *       *       *

“What do you think of that?” asked Lewis.

He was breathing quickly, Carla noticed. His face was flushed and he
was excited, more excited than she had thought he could possibly be.

“It is very ... erotic,” she said, knowing how inadequate that word was.

Holton was sweating when she turned to ask him what he thought. He
looked angry.

“Did you like it, Bob?” she asked.

“No, I didn’t,” he said. He took out his handkerchief and dried his
face. “Christ, but it’s hot in here. Why don’t we go?”

“In a moment,” said Lewis, now recovered. “You must meet dear Hermes.
I’ll go back stage and get him.” He stood up, looked around the room to
see if he were being watched; then, satisfied that he was, he went back
stage.

“You don’t care for this?” Carla asked.

“I guess I don’t. I never saw anything like this before. I used to hear
a lot of stories but I didn’t think there were really such places.”

“There are many a lot worse, said Carla. Of course I’m used to it. You
see my husband is....”

He smiled. “I guess you were right about not coming here.”

“You don’t regret it?”

“It’s interesting.”

“I think it was a very good idea for you to see something of this
world. Perhaps you can understand me better now, knowing that I’m
living with people like these, married to a person like Lewis.”

He frowned and looked very serious and she was happy to see him
concerned. “Can’t you leave him, can’t you leave Bankton?”

“Where would I go? He’s a charming person and I like him. I’d have to
find someone else before I could leave.”

“Yes,” he said, not understanding her, “I see what you mean.”

George _Robert_ Lewis returned leading Hermes, still in costume,
by the hand.

Everyone was polite. Hermes lisped that he was glad to meet them and he
shook hands squashily with both Holton and Carla. Then they sat down at
the table.

Lewis was excited. “You know Hermes has made the most dreadfully big
decision? He’s going to Rome!” Trumpets did not blow at that moment in
the band; they should have, though.

Carla was puzzled. “You mean he’s going to Italy?”

“No, darling, he’s becoming a Roman Catholic. Isn’t it the most
thrilling thing!”

“I suppose so,” she said. “I used to be a Catholic myself.”

“What happened?” asked Hermes in a lisping little girl’s voice.

“I seemed to’ve gotten out of the idea. I married a Protestant, of
course.”

“What a pity,” murmured Hermes, looking at Holton admiringly; “I think
it’s the only answer, really the only answer. Almost everyone I know is
going over to Rome so there must be _something_ in it.”

“Perhaps there is,” said Carla. “I think in Italy we take the Church
too much for granted.”

“I do wish,” said Lewis, “that I could get interested in it. There
seems to be such a rush for rosaries today. But I’m dreadfully afraid
I’m just a hedonistic pagan.” He put his hand on Hermes’ plump little
hand. “I’ve always felt that somewhere there is a faith that I could
grasp onto.” With his other hand he took a drink out of his recently
filled glass. “Sometimes one feels so lost, so homeless. I think there
must always be a womb-longing in each of us, a desire to go back where
we came from. I used to think that art was enough but I suppose I was
wrong because I never had much real satisfaction from it. Carla here
will say it is love that gives us a reason, but I don’t think so. I’ve
always been in love. Occasionally with my own image, I must admit,
but there _have_ been others. No, I never got much out of love.
Hermes here has his dancing, but I don’t think that was enough for him
either....”

“Perhaps you’ve never given enough of yourself to another person,” said
Carla.

“Vampire,” chuckled Lewis. “Our identities are the only real things
we have in this shadowy world.” He was in good form now and he was
becoming drugged with his own facility. “No, we must try to obtain a
faith, or at least a medium, to carry out our search for immortality,
or should I say perpetuation? Women, normal women, seem to have less
fear of death because they have the function of child-bearing. They are
able to experience their own perpetuation; and in their primitive way
they feel a part of all mankind and there are no real mysteries for
them, no need of logic. But man is different. The act of procreation
is a pleasure and not painful and, therefore, he does not observe that
in that function his own image is mirrored through eternity. He turns
then to art (the sensitive talented man, I mean now) and in making
pictures or books, playing at creation, he hopes to survive death but
he is never really convinced: at best he is hypnotized, he is drugged
by his art and in desperation he tries to make meaning out of his own
creations: playthings, in reality. And so he finds himself in the end
with chisel and mallet in his hands making a statue and no nearer
perpetuation, closer only to death.”

“How beautiful!” exclaimed Hermes. “But that’s why we all have to go to
Rome.”

“Perhaps that’s the answer.” He began to speak again, his flat voice
rising and falling without emotion in it. Carla looked at Holton
questioningly. He nodded.

“Bob and I have to go now,” she said.

“Oh, you must stay a little longer,” he pleaded.

“We really have to go,” said Holton, rising. They thanked him (Lewis
insisted on paying the bill) and said good-bye. George _Robert_
Lewis was still talking to Hermes as they left.




                            _Chapter Eleven_


“How cool it is!” said Carla, as they walked along the street. “I
couldn’t breathe in there.”

“It was a crazy place,” said Holton, looking straight ahead as he
walked, following the traffic lights. Carla occasionally drew him off
the curb and into the street but he always managed to obey the green
lights.

They decided to walk uptown, to walk to Times Square.

Carla felt light and happy now that Lewis had been left behind.

“I like the air in New York,” she said.

“The air?”

“It’s exciting and silly and everyone is busy doing things they don’t
want to do but still it’s stimulating.”

“I suppose so.”

She hadn’t decided yet whether he tried to be noncommittal or whether
he had nothing to say. No, he had something to say: she was sure of
that. He was shy and he felt things very much but he was afraid to say
them. She remembered now that he had told her things about himself in
Florence. He had told her about his parents and his life, though he
hadn’t told her what he wanted to do. He still would not tell her that
and, if he knew, she would have to discover it.

“How long are you going to be in town?” he asked.

“I don’t know. A month perhaps, I don’t know. I think Bankton will be
coming over soon. They’re going to give him a big show here.”

“I’d like to see him.”

“He’d like to meet you, too.” She laughed. “I might lose you to him”
She stopped herself quickly. She shouldn’t have said “lose” because
they were supposed to be just casual friends; at least, that was the
basis he seemed to want. She mustn’t frighten him. “I don’t think you’d
like him,” she said easily, in control now. “He’s rather jealous and
disagreeable.”

They crossed more streets, dodged more cars, bumped into more and more
people and, finally, they came to Times Square.

At Forty-second Street they stopped and Carla looked at the lights for
a long time.

It seemed as if all the commercialism in the world had decided to
concentrate itself in one place, as if by blazing colored lights and
moving signs it could justify itself.

At one end of the square a giant sign exploded colors, advertising
cigarettes. Another cigarette advertisement had a man puffing smoke;
it was most realistic because real smoke or something like smoke came
out of his mouth. Soft drinks and chewing gum and cigarettes--all the
small things--were displayed in the most magnificent manner. There
was an almost religious appeal in the brightness of the lights, the
cathedral-like splendor of the signs which supported countless colored
bulbs of light: everything was so large, so magnificent, so desperately
appealing.

“Such wonderful strength,” murmured Carla, “so much misguided energy.”

“It’s very nice to look at,” said Robert Holton, speaking
self-consciously for America.

They stood pressed against a building while hundreds of people pushed
by them in a thick stream. Carla studied the lights, mesmerized by
their colors: red passionate ones and guttering greens, blue and yellow
glowing, and moving figures; they even had the lights turn on and off
in such a fashion that silhouetted men appeared to dance and animated
animals had adventures. The lights were most splendid and nowhere in
the world was so much grandeur hung against the sky. Carla watched the
lights.

Yellow taxicabs clattered by them and everyone moved quickly. Everyone
had at least a destination and that was a hopeful sign. She didn’t care
to think what their destinations might be.

She looked at the buildings and saw that they were not tall. They
looked like buildings in Paris or London. Squat and dirty and rather
Victorian: the buildings were most ordinary but there was so much
light over them, against them, all around them that they became as
insubstantial as theater props.

The movie houses which filled the lower parts of most of the buildings
of the square had the most light. Their marquees rippled and glittered
with names. Large posters were hung wherever there was no electricity.
People moved in constant streams into the movies, while other people,
as constantly, came out, blinking their eyes, adjusting themselves to
reality.

Then there was the noise. Not a really individual noise, not like an
Italian crowd, hoarse and insistent, but a roar with sharp breaks and
a rhythm like an automobile engine, a noise like a discordant piece of
music with the rumblings of a subway train as a bass. The conversations
of many people made a sound as soothing and as natural as the sea but
the mechanical things made sharp overtones, set the rhythm of Times
Square and of many lives.

Slowly Carla and Robert Holton allowed themselves to become a part of
the current of people, gliding with them toward the north end of the
square.

First of all were the young adventurers: boys with dark skins and dark
clever eyes, dressed in the spirit of the jazz they had made their own
without understanding. Looking for sex, they walked together in groups,
talking in whining voices, unpleasant nasal voices.

Young girls with bleached blond hair that looked untidy and unclean
walked in twos together, looking for men. Their well-formed bodies with
tight breasts moved self-consciously as they walked on awkward high
heels. They laughed too loudly, giggled too much and stared at sailors.

The couples were the happiest-looking of all. They always walked with
wonder in their faces, conscious of each other as they walked through
all the light and sound.

Old men in dirty clothes moved slowly, looking for cigarette butts.
This was not new to them; they had known the square before and found it
good hunting though not as congenial as quiet places. They had stopped
looking for sex: only cigarette butts.

Cripples and bums sang songs and rattled tin cups. It was hard to tell
what they were looking for besides charity. Perhaps they had stopped
their long search. Carla was sorry for them.

Hot stale air rushed out of the theater lobbies and from the bars and
restaurants; stale air rushed upward from the subway ventilators in the
sidewalk. The cool night was defeated by the city, even the darkness
had been defeated for it was as light as day, as light as day and much
prettier and more exciting.

“What a place!” said Carla. “So _much_ is here. Is this the dream
Lewis was talking about?”

“Maybe.”

“I think,” said Carla, laughing, “this is the peak of your
civilization.”

“Probably; it’s the sign of the century.”

“But there will be other centuries.” And they thought of other
centuries when they would not be alive and they tried to see the square
in future years--if the square survived with the dream.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Outside the Bijou Theater Marjorie Ventusa stood, trying to make up her
mind if she wanted to see her favorite actress suffer. Marjorie liked
pictures that made her cry. She wasn’t sure, however, if she wanted to
cry tonight.

Mrs Merrin had been quite pleasant that evening when Marjorie left and
this made her feel good. She stood now, undecided, Times Square all
around her. She often faced the high prices of the square to see new
movies. She liked crowded places because she felt happy with a lot of
people around her.

She stood beside the box office, warmed by the air from the theater.
The sight of all the people and lights made her feel secure as though
she were not really alone, for she identified herself with every couple
that passed by. She had no envy.

Marjorie was about to go into the movie when she saw Robert Holton
crossing a street on the other side of the square. She had a sudden
impulse to call him, to make herself heard over the hundreds of people.
Then she saw that he was not alone. She saw that he was with a dark
pretty girl: a woman from the world where he lived. Marjorie Ventusa
watched him as he walked with this person across the street. Then, on
the other side, she lost him. He had disappeared with the dark woman.

The square had changed now and the lights were cruel. The noises became
oppressive and she felt shut out of the lives of the people who passed
her.

Marjorie Ventusa grabbed her black patent-leather handbag close to
her and, controlling herself, she walked along the square. She walked
slowly, allowing others to push by her. She passed in front of many
movie houses and many bars. There was a great noise all around her,
harsh voices and much laughing. She hated the laughing the most. Two
young girls were stopped by two sailors in front of her and they spoke
together in the light of a red neon sign. The sailors said something
and the girls laughed. Quickly Marjorie Ventusa walked by them.

A group of boys were standing in a blue light and they were laughing
in their harsh changing voices. She wished they would stop. Looking
downward, she walked through the crowd, no longer with it.

Marjorie Ventusa was the center now of laughing people and her eyes
were dazzled by changing lights.

Finally, out of breath, and at the northern end of the square, she
stopped and pressed against a building. She looked back at the places
she had just left and she was tired.

A stout little man was staring at her. He was trying to figure out what
she was and what he might dare do. She looked at him with disgust, but
he was not bothered by this and, thinking her a whore, he separated
himself from the crowd and came over to where she stood. He leaned
against the building a few feet from her. Slowly, calmly he took a
package of cigarettes out of his pocket. He turned to her now, offering
her a cigarette.

“Want a smoke?”

She shook her head. “No, thanks.”

He took one himself and lighted it. He inhaled to show how calm he was
and then he said, “You want to walk maybe?”

“No,” she said furiously, comparing him with Robert Holton. “I don’t
want to walk with you.” She turned away from him and went quickly
toward the nearest movie. Without once looking back she bought a
ticket. As she gave the ticket to the man at the door she heard the
stout man whistle as he walked past the theater.

Setting her face, she walked into the marble and gold lobby. She
walked, conscious of a thousand nonexistent eyes watching her back.

Then she entered the darkened hall of the movie. On the screen two
characters, simulating love, were laughing loudly. Marjorie Ventusa was
trapped.

Caroline and Jim Trebling had been giggling all evening. Caroline had
never known anyone quite so amusing as Trebling. He had no respect for
anything; at least, no respect for the things most people did. He made
fun of her office and her job and he was pleasant as he did it; not
bitter as so many people were.

He had suggested that they visit Times Square and go dancing in one of
the large dance halls there. She had tried to talk him into going some
place more expensive but he had said that he didn’t have the money and
that as long as you danced somewhere that was all that counted.

From Fifth Avenue they walked along Forty-Seventh Street until,
finally, they came to the square. Trebling blinked.

“It’s the damnedest sight! I don’t think it can compare with L.A. but
there really is something wonderful about it.”

Caroline regarded the square without much emotion. She had seen it all
her life. “I think it’s too crowded,” she said finally, wishing that he
had decided to take her to a better place, a place with a big name, one
she could talk about later.

He stood, however, staring at the lights; then he lowered his eyes from
the lights and looked at the people. She noticed now that he looked at
people a great deal. Even when they were talking he always stared at
people as though there was something wrong with them.

“Why’re you looking around all the time?” asked Caroline. “I don’t
understand you at all. I don’t think they like being stared at.”

“What?” He hadn’t been listening to her. “Why do I ... stare? I just
like to look at them and see what they’re so busy rushing around for.”

“Don’t you know?”

“No, do you?”

“Well....” She hesitated, uncertain of her meaning, uncertain of what
they were talking about.

He laughed. She admired his way of telling when she couldn’t understand
him; he never really embarrassed her by trying to talk over her head as
some men tried to do: not that they really could, of course. She was
an American woman and just as smart as any man. Caroline stood there
looking at the square with Trebling who had just laughed and saved her
from embarrassment; Caroline stood erect and sure of herself and her
emancipation, her arm in his.

Then, without speaking, he led her across the middle of the square.
It was dazzling to cross between the many lights. Caroline liked the
colors. They seemed rather cozy to her. Times Square was in many ways
her symbol of home. It was no longer interesting because home is never
interesting but she liked it still.

“Look at all the movie houses,” he said when they had gotten over on
the other side. “There’s so much of everything. But it’s dirty. It’s
all awfully dirty.”

“Is it?” Caroline had not thought of that. Perhaps the square was not
very clean but how could it be? There were always so many people coming
to be impressed or depressed by it.

“Bob used to talk a lot about this part of town, about Broadway. I
think he used to like it a lot,” said Trebling.

“Is that right?”

“Oh, sure. He was a playboy during the war.”

Caroline was surprised but not very interested. “He sure’s changed a
lot,” she said. “He’s a nice fellow and I know you think a lot of him
but he’s a little dull ... now, anyway.”

“I think,” said Trebling, “that people sometimes feel they have to
change to protect themselves. He’s just making a new life now.”

“He’s certainly making a dull one.”

“Not if it’s what he wants.”

“Imagine working in an office if you could do something else!”

“What about yourself?”

Caroline flushed; she had found herself becoming so much involved with
Trebling’s personality that she had begun to lose her own in his: she
had begun to think that she was as free as he was or, rather, as he
felt he was. She had to retrace now; she must go back into herself. “I
can’t do anything else,” she said. “That’s all I know--working in an
office.”

“You could get married.”

“I suppose I could.” Purposely she left it at that. He didn’t ask her
anything else. They watched the square.

Caroline was conscious of odors, too conscious of them. There were a
great many unpleasant odors in the square: beer and cigarette smoke and
exhaust; perfume and sweat and stale air from theaters and subways;
food cooking--hot dogs, hamburgers, popcorn and peanuts. She got a
little dizzy just breathing.

“Come on, Jim,” she said, “let’s go find the dance hall.”

They walked together along the crowded streets and as they walked he
told her wonderful stories of freedom that were not true but still very
interesting; and she thought him the most fascinating man she knew and
not at all like his dull friend Robert Holton.

At last they came to a dance hall. As much as she liked the glitter
of the square it was a relief to go inside the red-upholstered,
mirror-walled dance hall where the only odors were of perfume and
cigarette smoke.

“I haven’t been here for so long,” she said.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Mr Heywood came out of the theater. He had left in the middle of the
last act. It was his personal strategy to do this because it meant that
he missed the crowd and the long wait for his car to find him.

The play had been dreary and he had seen it only because a friend of
his knew the girl in it. Besides, Mr Heywood did not like to go to
plays alone. His wife no longer went with him and he was afraid of
taking other women around with him because people talked. He did not
like any men at all.

The street was almost deserted. The theaters still were full and their
chaste white light signs shone cleanly into the street. Two blocks away
was Times Square. He could just barely make out the colored sign of a
soft drink bottle. He shuddered as he thought of soft drinks.

He stood in front of the theater, the light from the marquee shining
dramatically down upon him. He would stand here now without moving
until his waiting chauffeur saw him and took him away. To his left he
heard the sound of a motor starting. He did not look to his left. He
merely stood now, self-contained and passive, waiting.

His car stopped in front of him. The chauffeur got out, opened the
door and said something to him and Mr Heywood said something to the
chauffeur and an understanding was reached. Mr Heywood got into the car
and the chauffeur drove down the street into the square and toward home.

Mr Heywood shrank from the lights that suddenly made the inside of his
car as colorful as a rainbow. He tried not to look out the window at
the square but it was impossible not to look. His eyes were drawn by
the force of the lights and he looked out finally.

All the cheapness he hated was in the square. The people of whom he was
terrified moved all about him now. The noises he hated to hear and the
lights he hated to see intruded. He shuddered and wondered if he was
going to be sick.

Finally they left the square.

He felt much better now that they were in the quieter darker places
of the city. Mr Heywood was lonely now. He had always been lonely and
that was his personal sadness. He wished that he were young. It was
impossible to be lonely when one was young. He wished that he were
Robert Holton.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Carla and Holton stopped to rest at the northern end of the square.
They stood upon a small island of concrete surrounded by avenues. A
red light shone across Holton’s face giving him a sinister expression.
Carla laughed.

“What’s so funny?”

“Your face ... you look like Mephisto.” He smiled and stepped out of
the red light and stood beside her.

“What do you think of it now?” asked Holton as they stood on their
island, watching.

“The things I’ve always thought. It’s very brilliant. It is a ...
production.”

“Everyone comes to see it.”

“And I think it means something different to each one. It’s like a work
of art that way.” She paused and added, “It is a work of art.”

“An unfriendly one, though.”

She shrugged. “Art doesn’t have to be friendly. To me all this bad
taste is very alive and miraculous.” She was going to say more but she
was not sure of her English. The language she had learned had been
literary and she was occasionally conscious of not speaking ordinary
words. Holton had not been listening, though. Caught in the magic she
had performed upon the square, he was melting into it, his eyes fixed
on the effect and not the details.

“What a place to make a decision,” he said firmly, turning to look at
her.

“A decision?” She was not sure of him now; not sure of the magic. “What
sort of decision?”

“I’ll tell you later.”

“If you like.” She could see that he was not ready to talk to her yet.
The signs were good, though. He was returning.

Arm in arm they deserted their concrete island. They crossed the street
and stood for a moment on the edge of the square, looking back at the
lights.

“Where do you want to go?” asked Holton.

“Back to my hotel,” she said, not looking at him.

“Shall I go with you?”

“Do you want to?” She noticed that one of the largest signs had several
dead lights in it.

“Of course I want to,” he said.

She was very happy then. The bridge was completed.

“Shall we walk? It’s not far.” He nodded. They left the bright square
and walked northward, not speaking. The bridge was not yet strong.




                            _Chapter Twelve_


They stood a moment in the gray heavily carpeted corridor. The hotel
was an expensive one and this was the first time Robert Holton had been
inside it.

“I’m down here,” said Carla, taking a key out of her bag. She led him
down the corridor.

She stopped, unlocked a door, and they went inside.

“In America you always try to make everything look expensive,” she
said. “But I like this room.”

“Looks like Hollywood,” said Holton. Carla looked about her and agreed.
The walls were dull green and the ceiling white. The furniture was
low and modern and there was much glass in the room: mirrors and
glass-topped tables. Two large windows looked out on Central Park. At
the left was the doorway to the bedroom.

“Bankton must have a lot of money,” murmured Holton.

Carla smiled. “No, I have, but that’s not important. Sit down over
there, Bob.” She motioned to a white couch by the window. “Would you
like something to drink?”

“If you want one.”

While she fixed his drink she would be able to think of the right thing
to say. She felt constrained still and her heart was beating rapidly.
She prepared the drink deliberately and, satisfied that it was right,
she turned and walked over to him. “Here you are.” Then she sat down
beside him.

They looked out at the city. Carla sat straight on the edge of the
couch, her eyes fixed on the tall buildings. She was conscious of
Holton’s slow breathing beside her. The silence was becoming difficult;
then he picked up his glass and ice clattered and the silence broke.

“Tell me,” she said, sitting back in the couch, “what do you do during
the days? What does a broker do?”

He opened his coat and relaxed. “Not much, I’m afraid. I get all sorts
of statistical books and I make out reports from them. It’s pretty
dull.”

“How long are you going to have to do that?”

“I don’t know ... a year maybe. I think Mr Heywood--he was the fellow
we met at the party--I think he’s going to move me out in the selling
end.”

“You would like that?”

“It means more money and it’s going to be my career.”

“That’s right; it’s going to be your career.”

Holton crossed his legs, using the movement to give himself time to
think. Carla waited, watching him.

“Are you going to live in Florence?” he asked finally.

This was not going at all well, she thought. “I think I may live there
part of the year. I think I shall travel first.”

“Where? Where do you want to go?”

“Some place in the Near East, some place like the _Arabian
Nights_--you’ve read it, haven’t you?”

“I read it once.”

“I always wanted things to be like that, to be enchanted.”

“And you’ve been disappointed?”

She nodded. “Sometimes I’ve been very disappointed but, you see, sooner
or later it’s all right. I’ve great faith in things being right.”

“You’re a curious girl,” he said. He looked at her and she could see
her own face twice reflected in his eyes. “You don’t,” he said, “really
like Bankton, do you?”

The words were making the proper patterns now. She turned so that he
would see all her face when she spoke. “Yes, I like him very much but I
don’t love him. I can’t love anyone without having it complete, without
having ... the other thing.”

“What we had.”

“Yes, what we had.” She felt that now he was coming back again.

“It was so long ago, wasn’t it?” She wasn’t sure now that he was coming
back: “so long ago.”

“I’ve remembered it,” she said. “It doesn’t seem long ago to me.”

“I don’t mean that,” he said. “I meant that ... well ... so much has
happened to us since then. You’ve been married and I left the army....”

“We’re not much different, are we?” She looked out the window now and
watched different lights go out in the tall buildings; for each light
that went out, though, someone else turned on another. “You know,” she
said, concentrating on the lights, “you know you were really the first
for me.”

He was awkward now. “Yes, I guess I was. I didn’t....”

“There were probably a lot of others for you in Europe. You know, I
haven’t really wanted any man since then.”

This had to surprise; she wanted this to be her strongest weapon. She
looked at him now. He had put down his drink and he was looking at her.

“Is that true?”

She nodded. “I don’t know why I shouldn’t tell you. I couldn’t keep
from telling you.” She tried not to look at him.

“You mean what happened to us in Italy was the only time...?” He was
confused.

She turned then and looked at him, at the troubled eyes and the boy’s
mouth. “My dear, when something means a lot to you I think it’s hard to
take a substitute. You see, I made an object for myself. I was upset
when you left, naturally, because you’d become my object. I never heard
from you and so I married Bankton in London. I never lost my object,
though. It never changed.”

“I’m sorry,” he said.

Carla smiled. “I understand it now. You had so many women and I was
only one. I think that’s all right, I think that’s natural. I hoped
you might have felt the way I did. One always wants to be loved and
it’s not easy to find a lover. I never had another man--not because I
couldn’t, but because I didn’t want to. I was waiting all that time,
hoping to see _you_ again.” She had said everything now. He had
listened and there was nothing else she could do.

He ran his hand through his hair. “I was very close to you,” he said.

“I thought you were.” She was waiting.

“You’re right, there were a lot of others, but I don’t think I loved
any of them.”

“No one at all?”

He didn’t answer. He stood up and walked across the room. Then he came
back and stood looking down at her.

“I don’t know what to say. We were very close once and then I came back
here and made myself forget everything about Europe, everything that
had happened to me there.

“It hasn’t been easy to do. The only way I could get by, though, was to
do what I’m doing: become a broker. I can’t be the way I was; I can’t
afford it. Of course I can still have all the girls I want and I can
have a good time. I suppose I can fall in love sometime ... again, but
I have to be a conventional person and I don’t mind.

“Tonight those people were examples of freedom....”

She interrupted him. “Not really freedom, self-indulgence perhaps.”

“Whatever it is, they call it being free. I don’t want that. I couldn’t
have that kind anyway because I’m not talented; I don’t do anything
well and I know it.”

“You can be a free person, though.”

“How?”

She sighed. “I’ve already told you and you already know. You can love.”

“You think that’s the answer?”

“I don’t know any other. It’s been important to me.”

He sat down beside her, sat close to her. “I don’t know if I could love
someone,” he said. “I don’t know if I could love you the way you’d
want.”

“You can,” said Carla. “You can do whatever you want.”

His hand touched hers. She sat very straight then, her eyes on the
window, on the white lights. He put his arm around her shoulders and
kissed her and she closed her eyes upon the lights outside.

For a long time they were like that on the couch. Then they separated
and stood up, self-conscious and shy, newly discovered. He motioned
with his hand toward the bedroom. She nodded and they went into the
bedroom together and met finally in the middle of the bridge.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Robert Holton held Carla from him at arm’s length and looked at her.
She was pretty, at this moment quite beautiful, her face white and her
greenish eyes glittering.

“I’ve been waiting, Bob,” she said. “I’ve waited such a long time.” He
pulled her to him then, her body against his. A part of him was given
up entirely to making love but another part was still detached, still
watching.

He helped her to undo her dress. Modestly now, with the reserve of
strangers, they stood back to back as they undressed.

She was beautiful and he had forgotten that. She was not really pale:
her skin was gold. She was slim and cleanly made and her breasts were
small. They faced each other and looked at each other, the detached,
the lonely part of himself memorizing every detail of her.

Carla walked slowly toward him and touched his shoulder. Tears were in
her eyes.

“What’s the matter?” he asked.

She shook her head and smiled: nothing was the matter now.

He took her slowly then, pressing her against his body gently, every
nerve vibrating in both of them; hearts beating quickly.

They stood like this in the middle of the room; then she broke away and
walked over to the bed and pulled the cover down.

“Turn out the light, Bob,” she whispered. It was a ceremony now:
neither of them spoke out loud in the presence of the miracle taking
place. He turned out the light. The room was dark except for the
lighted dots of windows in the buildings opposite and, over the
buildings, like unorganized window lights, cold stars shone clearly.

He turned and walked to the bed. Carla lay on her back, her arms
behind her head. He got in beside her and they lay there together, not
speaking, hardly breathing, and he felt the blood pounding in his head
while, next to him, Carla was shivering, was waiting. He turned over on
his side, barely touching her.

They did not speak now. Words were discarded and no surface was needed.
Instinct guided them finally, made them a separate world together;
there was only a dream existence outside of themselves.

And Robert Holton became the lover and ceased to be himself; his
detached awareness was, for the time, submerged and forgotten.

He ran his hands over her, feeling the smooth skin of her shoulders,
her thighs.... They kissed and began the act of completion.

To Holton it became a battle and a surrender, a taking and a giving; it
became a fusion. He was no longer himself, he was enlarged; a giant in
a world of giant sensations. He was no longer alone or incomplete.

Then the rhythm was found and the wild twistings and strugglings
stopped. He was conquering now and, in the conquering, giving.

He entered her and to the rhythm of their fast-beating hearts, with
a rush of sound like wind in his ears, he discovered the single
world. Lights whirled inside his head, behind his eyes: they came in
series--circles of sharp lights.

He was choking then, barely breathing, able only to cough and gasp.
Sweat covered him; his hands clutched at her shoulders as though they
were the only remaining solidity in a world rapidly disintegrating into
sensations and fast-moving lights and a quick wind.

There was no time now. There was no memory. There was no reason. The
struggle stopped and the moment came like fire.

Carla’s face was buried in his shoulder; she stiffened and then became
relaxed, the battle finished and won.

Like fire it came and the wonder was achieved; a world was glimpsed and
lost in a moment. Then, tide-like, the emotion stopped and withdrew.
The ecstasy was gone and only two people were left in its wake, left on
a high shore, exhausted, shipwrecked.

Robert Holton lay for a moment upon Carla’s still body, supporting
himself with his elbows so that he would not crush her; he breathed
deeply, taking in the air with great sobs. Beneath him Carla was quiet,
at peace, her shuddering stopped.

He kissed her very gently then and they separated, without words; they
lay quietly side by side, touching each other, yet apart, the trace
of their fire still inside of them, and exhaustion brought with it no
sadness, no loneliness.

Robert Holton put his arm under her head; then he looked out the
window, looked at the real stars, not nearly as bright as the ones in
his head, the ones they had made together.

Silence and darkness protected them.

Part of his mind became detached again and he saw himself in relation
to the world. He saw himself in a darkened room of a large hotel, lying
exhausted beside the wife of a painter. He frowned in the dark and he
fought the vision of the outer world.

Carla moved her hand over his chest, twisting the hairs; he felt a
spasm of tenderness shake him and he took her and held her close to
him. This was the moment when he felt he was not alone, felt that he
was not a single particle lost in a void. The half of him lost in the
womb had been regained and he was finally complete: he was God and
earth and other stars, so great was this fusion.

They slept quietly in each others arms. They slept unaware of time for
they _were_ time.

Carla woke first. She gave a start and Robert Holton opened his eyes,
wondered where he was; then he saw Carla beside him, saw a vague figure
by the light of stars.

“_Caro mio_,” she murmured, saying the first words either had
spoken.

“Darling,” he whispered.

“It’s so perfect,” she said and he put her head on his shoulder again.
Then they were still, looking at the uncertain outline of their bodies
on the whiteness of the bed.

He felt her smooth legs. They were cool, like dreams half-remembered.

“I love you,” she whispered into his ear, “so much more than you know.”

He kissed her for answer and his detached self almost fused with hers,
almost made a union, almost died and made him free.

Carla turned on the light. It was two o’clock and they had been asleep
for almost an hour.

Robert Holton lay quietly on the bed, his eyes closed, his breathing
regular, one arm over his forehead as though to defend himself. She
leaned over and kissed him lightly, then she got out of bed and went
into the bathroom.

Her face shocked and pleased her. “How depraved I look,” she murmured
to herself. Her face was glowing and her eyes shone and glittered.
There were red marks on her white skin. His beard had scratched her and
made her usually white face pink. With a sudden gesture she swept her
hair back out of her face, held her dark curling hair captive.

Holton appeared behind her then and he put his arms around her waist
and kissed the back of her neck. She shuddered and closed her eyes. She
could not look at light with so much inward light behind her eyes. They
stood like that. Then he let her go. They looked at each other: two
people now, so recently a single world.

“Happy?” she asked.

He nodded. “I’ve never had it like this before,” he said. “It never
meant as much to me as this.”

They walked back into the bedroom and sat down side by side on the
bed. Modestly Holton drew the sheet over their laps. They sat quietly
without speaking, their bare arms around each other. When Carla looked
at the window she could no longer see stars and lighted windows; she
could see only their reflection on black glass.

“What are you thinking?” he asked and she saw that he’d been watching
her.

“Nothing, Bob. I don’t think all the time, you know. I was only
feeling.”

“Feeling what?”

She smiled. “Feeling all the world.”

“I think I felt that, too ... to live in a big way....”

“Yes, I know.” She sighed. “You have to break all your little patterns.
You have to expand now.”

But there was resistance to this. “I don’t see why you can’t have
everything and still have that, too.”

“No, everything must be the richest and the fullest. Have you that?”

He stretched, the muscles moving under white skin. “Maybe it is; I
don’t know.” He took her then and they fell back together onto the bed.
For several minutes they were together and then he rolled over on his
side. She opened her eyes.

“What’s the matter, Bob?” she asked.

“I don’t know,” he said. He was looking at her, his dark hair in his
eyes. He pushed it back.

“You’re not sad?”

“No.” He ran his hands over her hips. “I was only wondering what’s to
happen next. You’ll go back to Europe.”

She had been waiting for this. She had been waiting for him to ask
this. Now she could say what she felt but the words did not come
easily. “I don’t have to go back,” she said. “I can stay here as long
as I like.”

“Then your husband’ll come over here.”

“I can leave him.”

He shook his head. “I couldn’t marry you.”

She was lost. She was falling now. It seemed as if the room had become
cold and foreign and she had come to a hostile country. There was no
longer an answer to make: the answer had been made. She tried not to
let her face show what she felt.

“Why couldn’t you marry me?”

“I haven’t any money.”

“I have.”

“I wouldn’t want that. You wouldn’t want to be married to a broker and
live in New York.”

“Why do you have to be a broker?”

He sighed then and she saw for the first time that he was the one
trapped, the one who would not escape. “What else can I do?” he asked.

“You can break with all this.” She was fighting.

“But what could I do? I have to do something. I have to be something.”

“Why do you have to be something? Why do you have to do things that you
don’t want, that make you unhappy?”

“Everyone has to. Besides, I’m not sure that I am unhappy.” She was
defeated at that moment. The dream she had been fashioning disappeared
and there were no traces of it left, only a lingering sadness and an
open wound.

He went on talking and she answered him but there was nothing left for
either of them to discuss.

Then after a while they both stopped talking. They sat side by side
looking out the window, or rather looking at themselves reflected in
the black mirror. Holton turned out the light and Carla was able to see
the stars again.

“That was funny, wasn’t it?” chuckled Holton.

“What? What was funny?”

“Lewis tonight and all those people talking about religion and art.”

“I don’t think it was funny; I think it was sad.”

“Why sad?”

“They were lost, I think. Just like us, Bob.”

She could feel him looking at her. “Are you?” he asked softly.

She would not let herself cry. She would not give way. She would have
to be strong now. Her voice carefully controlled, she said, “No more
than you. We could be complete, I think.”

“I think we could,” he said and she knew that he felt nothing the
way she did. Carla had the feeling of coming into a stranger’s house
expecting friends, expecting familiar things. She was with an unknown,
a man who did not feel what she did.

“I had hoped,” said Carla, “that we could.” She was going to be
accurate in what she said. She used each word like the cut of a knife
to sever the relationship, to kill her own love. “I don’t think we can
now. You want to live a certain life. You want what you know and though
you don’t like it you think it’s the safe thing. I don’t understand
you, I’m afraid. I’ve tried to see all this through your eyes. I
didn’t want it to be just another one, another woman. I wanted it to
be important to you: it was so important to me. I think I was wrong. I
think I was selfish and I’m sorry.” She wondered when her voice would
break.

Then Holton tried to reconstruct at last. “No, you don’t understand.
I feel very close to you. I’ve liked this more than any other time,
more than with anyone else. But you see I can’t leave what I’m doing; I
couldn’t live on you for the rest of my life.”

She sighed. “That’s such a superficial thing; that’s all the surface.
When you feel something for another person those things don’t matter.”

“Someday they might. Of course I’m lonely and not very happy. You have
to accept that. In a few years I’ll get married and maybe that’ll make
it better. I could,” he was speaking slowly now, “marry you. I could do
that but you wouldn’t be happy.”

“How do you know I wouldn’t be happy here?”

“You’re different, that’s all. I can’t tell you what the difference is.
I don’t know.”

And she couldn’t tell him what the difference was. There was no way to
tell.

He put his arms around her in the dark and they relaxed on the bed and
she tried to give herself to the moment but she could not: too much had
been given already.

“It’s a temptation,” said Holton suddenly.

“What is?” They separated.

“To go to Europe with you, to live with you.”

“It could be done.”

“Maybe.... No, it wouldn’t work.”

“Why?”

“It just wouldn’t be practical.”

No, she thought, it wouldn’t be practical.

Then the passion came back to them and she almost forgot his
withdrawal. She fell back onto the pillows, his body over hers.

He whispered in her ear, “You know I really have to leave after this.”

“Of course you must,” said Carla, dying gently.




3

THE YELLOW WOOD




                            _Chapter Thirteen_


The early morning was cold and Robert Holton shivered as he left the
warm lobby of the hotel. He stood outside on the sidewalk and wondered
where he was. He turned to the left and walked a few steps and then he
remembered the street he was on, remembered where east and west were.
He turned to the right and walked rapidly toward Fifth Avenue.

The streets were almost deserted. Occasionally a taxicab would clatter
by. Occasionally a tired couple looking for a room would pass him on
the sidewalk. As he walked, his own footsteps made sharp regular noises
on the pavement.

He came at last to a subway entrance. He breathed deeply, took a last
breath of clean air and went down inside the ground.

Pale lights burned in old sockets and a sleepy Negro sat within the
money-changer’s booth. A sailor stood vomiting in a corner; he was very
quiet about it and the Negro paid no attention to him.

Robert Holton put his nickel in the turnstile.

On the platform several people were waiting for the train. They were
all tired. Another sailor had a girl and he was standing very close to
her. They were both drunk and made strange little movements with their
heads and hands, slow-motion movements, as though they were flying.

Robert Holton stood against an iron pillar. He felt exhausted but
physically serene. He rested his head on the hard rough surface. It was
pleasant to stand like this, underground.

The uptown train stopped with a jolt, the doors opened and Robert
Holton stepped into the lighted train. The doors closed and the train
started again.

Everyone in the car was weary or drunk or both. Papers and cigarette
butts covered the floor. A pair of dirty gloves lay at his feet,
forgotten by the owner, unwanted.

Robert Holton tried to sleep but the glare of light through his eyelids
was distracting. His physical exhaustion was lessening, too, and he
began to feel a return of energy.

He would not think of Carla, though; he would not think of her for a
little while. He would wait until he was in his room.

After a long time, after ten minutes, the train stopped at his station
and he climbed out of the ground and stood on the concrete surface of
the earth; a suggestion of morning was in the sky and the wind blew
fresh and cold from the river. He walked to his hotel.

“Evening,” said the clerk behind the desk.

“Good evening,” said Holton.

“Is it getting colder out?”

Holton nodded. “Probably be a real cold day tomorrow.” He walked over
to the counter. “Have I got any mail?”

“Let’s see ... that’s...?”

“Holton.”

The clerk looked, then shook his head. “No mail, Mr Holton.” He paused.
“You was in the army?”

“Yes, I was in the army.”

“So was I.” The clerk was lonely and wanted to talk and Holton was
still tired and nervous and wanted to think. “It sure is nice being
out,” said the clerk.

“Yes, it’s good to be out.”

“I was with the 82nd; you remember the 82nd, don’t you?”

“Of course I do.”

“We had a good group of guys.”

“I know you did.”

“Nothing like being a civilian, is there?”

“No,” said Robert Holton, “there’s nothing like being out. Good night.”

“Good night.” The clerk who had been with the army was sad to see him
go.

He turned the light on in his room. It was all just the same, the
troubling painting and the crowded dresser. Sometimes he would come
into his room and have a feeling that everything would be changed when
he turned on the light, that something exciting would have happened to
change his room. It was always the same, though; always the way he left
it.

Holton went into the bathroom. He should take a bath; he wanted to take
a bath but he was too tired. In the morning; there would be time for
that in the morning.

He undressed and put on the bottom of his pajamas; he never used the
tops. Then he looked at himself in the mirror for a long time. He did
not see himself in the mirror; he saw no image; rather he was trying to
find an image, an explanation in the glass. But he found nothing and
as he realized his failure the reflection of his face appeared in the
mirror and he looked at it without interest because it was familiar and
because he could see nothing behind it.

He turned and went into his room. He sat down on the bed and wondered
whether he could sleep or not because his mind was uneasy. Holton
turned out the lights and stretched out on his bed. He would make
himself sleep; he would not think of Carla or of the day ended.

But his mind was too active now for him to sleep. He tried to hypnotize
himself, tried not to hear the odd words and conversations in his ears.

He gave up finally. The barriers went down.

George _Robert_ Lewis’s voice sounded in his head and the clashing
colors of the fairy night club glittered in his head. Lewis’s voice,
flat and nasal, became articulate.

“I do feel that religion is merely a substitute for the loss of a
personal vision.” His sharp little laugh sounded and the words repeated
themselves over and over again in Robert Holton’s ear: loss of a
personal vision ... a vision ... and elision.... The words became a
refrain. The repetitions went on until Holton felt himself losing
control. He was angry. He made the repetitions stop.

George _Robert_ Lewis began to talk again.

“I feel that we can find some way through the morass of life, some way
to be serene and not sterile, not static. I think probably art is the
way for the sensitive. If one has talent one can practise a medium;
without talent one can appreciate.

“Love? What _does_ that word mean, darling? I’ve tried so awfully
hard to be sincere about it and I’ve had some delicious attempts at
it. Did you ever know Philip?... No, of course you wouldn’t have known.
But as I was saying ... what was I saying?”

Holton tried consciously to recall what Lewis had said. But when he
tried to hear speeches again he could not. Lewis’s voice began again, a
disembodied voice speaking among colors in a place where all emotions
were in a minor key.

“I think one must really barricade oneself against the world. One
must retreat. Now don’t tell me it’s cowardly to retreat. Nothing in
this world should be put on such a superficial basis as that. We are
talking on different planes. That’s why communication is so difficult.
Every argument is true and false and can be argued rightly from either
side. To have any agreement those discussing should decide right away
on what plane they want to talk. On a superficial and obvious one
the terms bravery and cowardice and right and wrong have a certain
meaning. On a deeper plane they have different, sometimes opposite,
meanings--sometimes no meaning at all.

“Well, to get back to my point, on the _deepest_ level of
understanding only instinct and what is natural counts. If one can’t
arrive at love (and so many of us, darling, haven’t the capacity for
it) then one must make a substitute, something to take up the sixty or
seventy years one is alive. That’s where art is important. I understand
business men feel the same way about business, though I’m not at all
sure about that.

“And then as for all this driveling about going to Rome let me say I do
feel that religion is merely a substitute for the loss of a personal
vision....”

The sound of Lewis’s voice became louder and continued until finally
the voice became so loud that it ceased to be a voice and became
silence.

Robert Holton wanted to sleep but there were so many things that had to
be arranged first.

There was also the dream of the night before to be recalled. He would
think of that later.

He remembered Jim Trebling. He thought of the days on the boat when
they had talked about the future.

Against a background of sea he could recall the image of Trebling.
Details were absent and he could not make out the face but he could
hear the voice and he could see the ocean.

“I hate the idea of being tied down any more than I have to be. You
know, Bob, we’ve lived the most unnatural life there is during this
war. I get the feeling sometimes that we’ve lost a lot of time. I keep
wanting to start over again.

“I might want to start my own business. I think that’s not so bad: it’s
worse working for somebody else. It’s funny but I’d just as soon never
work. I’d just as soon drift the rest of my life.”

And Robert Holton had agreed. He agreed in those days.

“Of course you have to have money to loaf. Maybe if we hadn’t been
raised in such a sound middle-class way we could be bums but we’re too
used to being comfortable. No, we’re too used to being comfortable.
We’ve got to get the money first.”

Robert Holton had agreed to that, too. He had agreed to everything.
He wanted to be as free as possible. At least he thought he had then.
Because his friend wanted it he felt he did too. He assumed a similar
identity.

Trebling had more to say and his deep laughing voice continued: “No,
we’re going to have to work a little. Not much, just a little to get
enough ahead. We’re going to be careful though not to get bogged down,
not to get too interested in working. It’s dangerous to get to like it.”

Holton agreed.

“Well, Bob, get your mind on the ball. How’re we going to spend that
army money? I think pottery out in California sounds easy.”

Yes, pottery was easy. Then they separated and they changed. Or perhaps
only he, Holton, had changed. He’d done the easiest thing, he thought.
But it was true that he was entangled now for the rest of his life with
Heywood and Golden; with them or another like them.

Trebling was entangled, too. Holton was pleased by that as he lay
in the dark. Trebling hadn’t done better. He belonged to the army
now and his chances of beginning a business were slight. He might
try it though; he might be able to live the way he wanted to. Holton
shuddered. It would be awful to miss freedom so narrowly.

There was a problem, still unsolved: what did he want?

“You know,” said Trebling’s voice, rising up out of the sea, “you know
you make things tough for yourself. You don’t make up your mind.”

That wasn’t true, he was always plotting; most of the time, anyway.

“You try to be like everybody else.”

He was safest when he was like the rest of them. No, that wasn’t a bad
thing to do; besides, he wasn’t that way really. He was different from
the others in the office. They sensed that. He would probably go a
long way and most of them wouldn’t. Perhaps he was like Heywood. That
wasn’t bad. Heywood was a success. _He_ could be free if he liked.
He had money and he could do whatever he liked.

Trebling’s voice was fainter now and the sound of the sea behind it was
becoming loud. “Sure we might flop but if we don’t we’re just fine.
I’m not worried; I’m not worried about anything except being stuck in
an office and working for somebody. That’s a lot to worry about, I
suppose, but I’m not bothered. It’s going to work out. You’re a long
time dead, I figure ...”

The sea came into Holton’s room then and he was whirled on the top of a
wave; for a moment there was nothing but sensation. He opened his eyes
in the dark and the sea was gone.

Trebling’s voice was lost.

Holton turned over on his side, troubled, tired, looking for sleep. He
thought of Carla. He had to think of her; there was a decision to be
made.

She had been quiet when he left her in the apartment. She had not
looked him in the eyes and he had been eager to leave, to escape.

Now she began to speak again. She had talked to him as he was dressing.

“I don’t think it would work now. I’d hoped it would; for a long time
I’ve thought about you, about our living together. But you don’t want
to.”

He had tried to deny this but he could not deny what he felt.

Her voice came back to him now, a sad thin echo; there was no vibrancy
in the remembered voice. She was whispering in an empty room.

“You’re going to accept a pattern and I can’t stop you. I can’t bring
out the capacity for love in you. You have it, I know, but I’m not
enough to make you aware....”

Again the denial and again the sad voice whispering.

“No, I was wrong to try to change your life. It’s very selfish to do
things for people they don’t want done. I wanted you so much. You’re
the one I’m not supposed to have, though, and that’s sad for me.”

He had talked to her then and explained that he could not take the
risk of living with her, that he must be within the pattern. But he
could not make any of these things sound convincing. Somehow everything
got confused as he tried to explain himself to her. He tried to tell
her that he did love her but that he couldn’t live with her. She had
listened and when he had finished she had talked again. Now her voice
entered his room; it was a shadow’s voice murmuring in his ear.

“I don’t think I’d better see you again, Bob. It’s very hard for me but
I’m going to control myself. I am going to forget all the things I had
dreamed about since Florence. I shall find a new object and that’s a
hard thing to do. It’s hard to change but I will.”

That was true, of course. There was also more.

She walked with him to the door; she let him go free to his chosen
prison.

The little voice no longer whispered in his ear and there was nothing
but silence and the beating of his heart, the slow beating of his heart.

The shade of the window fluttered in the outside wind. Bits of light
gleamed around the shade as it fluttered. Lights from signs and behind
those lights, gray and massive, was the light of early morning. The
room grew colder.

He got under the blanket and he closed his eyes tight and thought of
nothing: thought of shapes and shadows and lights and colors and all
the things that comprise nothing: he could not sleep.

Robert Holton made a case for himself as he lay in the occasionally
broken dark.

He had no gift. He was an average person. Perhaps not quite average,
he had had many advantages. He was among the many, though. He could
not make a world separate. He wished now that he had told Carla that:
he could not make a world separate. He belonged to the world of all
people and it was wrong to retreat from that world. He felt noble as he
thought of this: it was an excellent argument and he wished that he had
used it.

To have gone to live with Carla would have been a retreat from all
that was right. Right? What had Lewis said about the planes of
understanding? It didn’t matter because Lewis was just another little
fairy. He was perverted in everything. No, it was right not to live
with Carla. He had to do what was expected of him.

Robert Holton built himself an argument, and as he built his barricades
stronger he was aware of discontent, well-hidden beyond the barricade
but still alive. Duty was important and difficult. Nothing that was
right was easy. Was that true? He was becoming confused.

He had worn too many faces. He thought of the myriad faces he had been
made to wear. He had been different with every person he’d ever known.
This lack of consistency bothered him. In the army he had been without
care, without ambition; he had been like Trebling.

With the people in the office he had been cold or warm, as they were.
He had given them what they expected. He had been an actor with too
many rôles to play. Tonight he had played all of them for Carla and
then he had become lost and he had tried to be himself and he found
that he was not enough.

Every person saw him differently, not entirely because every person was
different, but because he had also intended it to be that way. Now he
did not know himself. He had no way of knowing the person behind the
myriad faces.

For a moment he felt himself sinking. It was like a dream of falling.
He seemed to be descending into a pit without bottom. There was no
longer a Robert Holton: only a series of masks, cracked now and no
longer usable, no longer convincing. He could never use one again.

He stopped falling; by an effort of will he stopped himself. Carla was
gone and he was sorry. There was no one else and loneliness now crept
out of the silence. He would have to build the barricades stronger and
higher. He would shut loneliness out.

The masks were no longer good. Carla had helped him break them. This
was to be a beginning then. He would assume an identity. He would
become a decided person and he would cease to be changed by others.

Robert Holton would become a successful broker working in an office.

The decision was made and he felt secure at last. The words and
thoughts that had been in his mind, troubling him, stopped abruptly. He
had a magic of his own and he had used it and it worked. Now he was
free. There would be no more talk of going away to Florence and living
with a pretty woman who loved him and wanted him to be different. He
was resolved at last. It was as simple as that. With great effort he
assumed an identity and freed himself from doubt.

He stopped twisting. The fever was leaving and he was tired.

Robert Holton turned over on his stomach and took a deep breath. Soon
he would be asleep. All his questions were solved--except one. There
was still something to be taken care of, something not very important,
but bothersome. He frowned with his eyes shut. Then he opened them and
he looked across the room at the dark outline of the picture frame.

The dream.

He hadn’t been able to remember the dream of the night before: the
troubling, unpleasant dream. It had great significance, he knew.

His only half-conscious mind tried to remember. He kept it purposefully
unawake because in this state, between sensation and memory, most
dreams could be recalled.

For a long time he wondered. But he could not remember, and he went to
sleep finally, exhausted, and in his mind was hidden the dream of the
night before, the secret dream, the dream of death, of living. He had
almost remembered.




                                                      _Chapter Fourteen_


The next day was cold, colder than the early morning had been.

Robert Holton took a bath, dressed, and went down in the elevator. He
said good morning to the man at the desk who gave him a letter from
his father. Then he went outside; shivering, he walked to the subway
station. Without buying a paper he went down into the ground and at
Wall Street he came to the surface again.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Marjorie Ventusa was glad to see him. The movie she had seen the night
before had been a successful tragedy and she had wept and had been able
to think about herself less tragically afterward.

She watched him as he came into the restaurant. He went to his usual
table and sat down. After he was seated she picked up a tray and walked
over to him.

“Good morning, Mr Holton,” she said, and smiled.

“Hello, Marjorie. How’s everything going?”

“Fine, just fine. Weather’s getting cold, though.” She noticed that he
had dark circles under his eyes. She tried not to think of what he
might have been doing with the dark-haired girl.

“Got anything good for breakfast? I feel pretty worn out today.”

“I guess you were out late last night.”

He nodded. She couldn’t stop asking now; she couldn’t stop thinking
about Robert Holton and the dark-haired girl.

“Probably one of those big parties, I guess.”

He nodded and said, “Sure, one of those big parties.”

She was not sorry that he lied. “We got some good sausage today,” she
said.

“I’ll take whatever you got ... and black coffee.”

“Sure, I’ll go get it.” She walked back to the kitchen. She frowned
when she saw Mrs Merrin looking at her. She had to look serious even
though she was happy. He had at least not wanted to tell her that he
was out with another girl. She had made so many images of Holton and
herself that she accepted an imagined closeness as real. He had not
really been unfaithful this time.

She called out his order to the cook and then she fixed her snood in
the steamy mirror. She had bought a dark snood and she noticed now that
it made her hair look darker, look rather mysterious. It felt good to
look mysterious.

His breakfast was ready and she took it out to him.

She made herself busy at the next table and she talked to him as she
worked.

“You like going out to them big parties?”

“Not so much.”

“Why do you go?”

“Business, I guess. It’s good to see all the big shots.”

“You’re right there; you’re sure right there.”

“What’s that you got on your head?”

She giggled self-consciously and wished that she didn’t get so silly
when she was pleased. “Just a snood. I’ve had it such a long time.”
This was not true.

“Looks nice,” said Holton seriously, biting into a piece of bread.

“Thank you; I like it.” No, that was wrong, it sounded defiant and she
didn’t mean that. She added in a much softer voice, “I’m glad you like
it.”

He ate then and she put dirty dishes on her tray. Then he said,
“When’re you going to Italy with me?”

She laughed. “I got some previous engagements before. Any other time,
though.”

“I’m told it’s nice there,” said Holton and she noticed that he looked
sad and she was happy to think that he was a little concerned about
her, that he was almost serious when he talked about Italy.

“Maybe we’ll go some other time,” she said.

“Sure,” said Holton, “maybe we’ll go some other time.” He drank his
coffee. He looked at his watch. “Lord, I’m late,” he said. He paid her
quickly. “See you at lunch.”

“See you at lunch, Mr Holton.” She watched him go out the door and into
the crowded street.

She cleared his table. Then she went gaily back to the kitchen, her
hair bobbing mysteriously in its snood. She was glad she hadn’t told
him she’d seen him in Times Square.

                   *       *       *       *       *

“Late, aren’t you?” asked Caroline when Holton came into the office.
She knew he was late but she was in a mood of violent humor; she was
always this way when she was happy and she was happy today because of
Trebling.

“Not very,” said Holton and he went to his desk. Mr Murphy hadn’t come
in yet and he was safe. Caroline sat for a moment enjoying the pale
white sunlight that shone across her desk. Then she got up and came
over to Holton’s desk.

She was awkward now. She wanted to find out things but she didn’t want
to be subtle. She tried anyway. “I was out with Jim last night,” she
began.

“How do you like him?” Holton wasn’t paying much attention to her and
this was irritating. He was busy putting books on his desk. She looked
around to see if anyone was watching. Kuppelton was out of the room and
no one else appeared interested. She sat down on his desk.

“I like him quite a bit,” she said.

He looked at her. “Good,” he said. “Jim’s a fine fellow. You’ll have
fun playing around with him.”

“I suppose I will.”

“Just don’t take him too seriously, though. He’s sort of an expert with
girls.” How shallow Holton was, thought Caroline. “Just play with him
and you’ll be all right. A lot of girls’ve liked him.”

“I can understand that. He’s really serious about starting something
himself. At least he doesn’t want to work for somebody like everybody
else wants.” She wanted this to be sharp; she didn’t care if it hurt or
not.

“That’s a good thing to want,” said Holton. How dull he is, thought
Caroline, comparing him unfavorably with Jim Trebling.

There was nothing she wanted to know from Holton. “How was your society
party?” she asked.

“It was O.K.,” said Holton. “It was interesting.”

I’ll bet, thought Caroline. She was impatient of others now that she
knew she was appreciated, knew that she was to see Trebling that night.
“Well, don’t work too hard,” said Caroline, getting up from the desk.
“By the way, I’m going out with Jim tonight.”

“Better be careful,” said Holton seriously.

She laughed. “I’m always careful; didn’t you know that?”

                   *       *       *       *       *

Heywood was feeling well. He had managed to get home early the night
before. That was one advantage in going to the theater alone: you
didn’t have to go some place afterward and get drunk.

He sat contentedly in the mahogany twilight of his large office,
looking at a photograph of himself. There was no particular work to be
done. Golden hadn’t bothered him yet and it would be almost an hour
before he had his first conference.

A buzz came out of the box on his desk. He pressed a button.

“Mr Murphy to see you,” said his secretary, concealed in the box.

“Send him in.” There was something he had to tell Murphy. Something to
do with the party. The young man, Robert Holton: he was to do something
for him.

“Good morning, Murphy.” Mr Heywood did not bother to rise.

“Morning, Mr Heywood,” said Murphy and Heywood wished his voice wasn’t
so loud. It jarred the twilight mood of the office.

“I’ve got some statistics here, the ones on Steel stocks; the ones
showing fluctuation and ...”

“Ah, yes, Murphy, that’s very good of you to have them for me so
promptly. I have another matter to discuss....” Heywood paused to make
sure that Murphy was listening to him carefully. “This boy, Holton,”
he went on, “I think he might do better dealing with the public, don’t
you?”

“Yes,” said Murphy judiciously, “yes, I think that might be a good
place for him. You saw him last night?”

“What? Oh, yes, I saw him last night. I had a pleasant talk with him.
He’s a clever young man, I think.”

“Yes, he’s got a good head on his shoulders,” agreed Murphy.

“You will tell him, won’t you, about his promotion and, ah, transfer?”

“Certainly. He’ll be glad to hear this. I’ll be glad to tell him. And,
by the way, there’s another matter in my section....”

“And what is that?” asked Heywood gently, trying not to yawn.

“Well, we’ve a man named Kuppelton who’s always done a good job and I
think he should get the usual promotion in that department. The one we
had in mind for Holton.”

Heywood sighed. “Certainly, Murphy; I rely, as always, on your
recommendation in these cases.”

“Thank you....” They talked then of nothing that interested Mr Heywood.
Finally Murphy left.

Mr Heywood yawned and stretched. He was rested and almost happy. He
would make good decisions today. He sat back in his chair and looked at
the photograph of himself. He would divorce his wife and go to South
America for a year. Or perhaps he wouldn’t divorce his wife but take
her to South America instead. It was strange but he looked younger now
than he did when the photograph was taken several years before.

                   *       *       *       *       *

When Kuppelton heard the news his first impulse was to call his mother
immediately on the phone and tell her all about it. He decided not to,
though, because, after all, it wasn’t completely official. He did talk
to Holton about it.

“Congratulations,” he said as he came over to Holton’s desk. Mr Murphy
had already gone to lunch and it was safe to talk.

“Thanks,” said Holton, smiling. He didn’t seem as happy as Kuppelton
expected him to be.

“Caroline just told me that Mr Murphy told you you were going to be
a customers’ man and I’m certainly glad to see you’re getting ahead.
I always thought that this job would be too small to hold you.” He
paused. “When do you think you’ll move out?” he asked, looking away.

“The first of next week probably.” Holton chuckled. “I guess you’ll be
sorry to see me leave.”

Kuppelton recognized the sarcasm but he didn’t care. “Sure I’m sorry.
Of course, it’s good news, in a way, for me.”

“It is at that.”

“You sure got a good deal. Well, you can’t beat City Hall I always say.”

“You always say that?”

“What? Well, no, but.... What I meant was....”

Robert Holton only laughed.

Kuppelton tried to talk some more with him but it was very difficult;
they never had liked each other, anyway. Kuppelton left him to go to
lunch.

He was jubilant but dignified as he put on his coat and hat and walked
down the corridor. He would have a lot of news to tell his mother
tonight. Everything had worked out nicely and soon he would be making
more money and everyone he knew was happy.

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