If Felix is right, won’t I start another alliance with another woman five years, ten years, fifteen years after marrying Maggie? Does marriage automatically become a quagmire of boredom and disillusionment from which escape is an absolute necessity? Escape or die? Escape or be buried alive?
But how can I hurt Eve? How can I willfully hurt someone I’ve loved, lived with, shared with, dreamed with, grown with? How can I hurt someone who is an essential part of me? And how can I consider her an essential part of me and still think of leaving her? And what about the kids? What do Chris and David mean to me? What’s my role as father? What’s my true relationship to them? Hello, Chris, hello, David, pat on the head, don’t wet the bed, don’t do this, don’t do that, here now give me a kiss before you go to sleep, an accidental relationship. What do they mean to me, and what do I mean to them?
What does my father mean to me?
He’s a crashing bore who puts me to sleep every time he opens his mouth. Will Chris and David think I’m a bore when they grow up? Will I be able to sit across a restaurant table from a grown-up son and have an intelligent, interesting conversation with him? Or do all parents turn into crashing bores? What’s a parent but a judge and a jury and a pain in the ass? What real affection does Chris feel for me? Or David?
Questions, questions, questions.
Where are all the answers? Who’s giving out the answers today? Isn’t there a man who stands on street corners with answers? A man like Roger Altar who has all the pat endings in a big bag of tricks? But try to apply those endings to reality, just try. In real life, you pick a happy ending, and there are fourteen other people involved who’ve decided on fourteen different endings. And all the endings are in conflict, and either you stick to your own ending and make a lot of people unhappy, or you take one of their endings and make yourself unhappy.
I don’t want to hurt people, he thought.
I really don’t want to hurt anyone. Do I have to kill Eve to prove something to myself? And what am I proving after I’ve killed her? I’m simply proving that I’m willing to indulge my own selfish whims to their most ridiculous extreme. I am destroying her in order to build a new image of myself, which image may or may not be valid.
But it is valid.
It is the only valid image of me.
I want the job in Puerto Rico, and I want Maggie. I do not want one or either; I want both.
I, I, I, the enormous ego of me, the enormous self-centred universe of me! But what else is life about? Isn’t it all about me? The happiness of me, and the sadness of me, and the hopes of me, and the shattered or realized dreams of me? Isn’t ME the most important concept and hasn’t it always been? Why did I marry Eve if not to please ME? Was I thinking of her, was I thinking of how magnanimous I was being in showering upon her the rains of this magnificent being who is me? Wasn’t I thinking of myself alone and of how much Eve pleased ME? Am I not the sum total of the universe? Doesn’t the universe have its nucleus in each and every solitary individual who shouts “I, I, I!” against the total oblivion of anonymity?
I, I, I!
I want the job in Puerto Rico, and I want Maggie.
He reached for the ignition key.
And in the second it took him to twist the key and start the engine, he decided to accept the Baxter proposal, divorce Eve, and take Maggie with him to Puerto Rico.
26
The men met in a midtown bar on a Monday afternoon two weeks later.
By that time Larry had formulated a tentative plan of action. And the one certainty in that plan, it seemed to him, was the Baxter proposal. He had realized early, and with some loss of assurance, that he could not definitely count upon Maggie’s affirmative reaction to his scheme. He would, after all, be asking her to make a decision which he himself had reached only after grave consideration. He could not expect her to leap into a new experience blindly, without first giving it serious thought. He did, in truth, feel she would readily agree to anything he suggested. But he was certain that the presentation of the Puerto Rican job as a fait accompli, the concept of the island as a sanctuary, would help her in deciding to sever whatever ties still bound her to Don. And so he did not discuss his decision or his scheme with her. He would do that after he spoke to Baxter. The acceptance of the Baxter proposal was his foundation; upon that he would build.
The bar at five o’clock was full of editors and publishers discussing their fall lists. As Larry waited for Baxter, he found himself inadvertently eavesdropping, hoping to hear some discussion of Altar’s name or the new book. The hot topic of discussion, though, seemed to be a new novel by a fifteen-year-old Indian girl who — judging from the wild enthusiasm — had very important things to say about sex and saris. Larry couldn’t imagine what important things a fifteen-year-old girl had to say about sex. He mused that he was surely approaching middle age when he began considering adolescence unimportant, and then in self-defense tried to learn the title of the book so that he could buy it and read it with appreciative tolerance for the very young. Apparently none of the editors or publishers were interested in the title. They were solely concerned with discovering how a fifteen-year-old Indian girl had come to know so much about sex. They were climactically discussing a particularly inflammable chapter of the book when Baxter walked into the bar.
Larry rose and signaled to him, and he came to the table immediately, his hand extended.
“Good to see you, Larry,” he said. “I need a drink. Where’s the waiter?”
They shook hands, and then ordered. Baxter made himself comfortable and said, “I was hoping Eve would be with you.”
“No, not today,” Larry said.
“I like that girl,” Baxter said. “How is she?”
“Fine.”
“I like her a great deal,” Baxter said, and Larry felt a first indefinite twinge of warning. “Ah,” Baxter said, “here’re the drinks.” He waited while the drinks were put down, and then he picked up his glass. “Something wrong with the times,” he said. “Do you know that? I really look forward to this drink at the end of the day. Look forward to it? By God, I need it! I’m a mild alcoholic, I’m sure. But all I know is that after a day of pounding and pounding and pounding, I need this drink. Cheers.” He drank. “How’s Eve?” he asked.
“Fine,” Larry repeated, the warning twinge stronger now.
Baxter nodded. “How does she feel about Puerto Rico?”
“Well...”
“Or haven’t you discussed it with her?”
“Certainly I have.”
“Does she seem favorably inclined?”
“Well...”
“Or do I seem to be putting undue stress upon Eve’s reaction?” Baxter smiled pleasantly and sipped at his drink. “Eloise and I will be going to Puerto Rico to live, you see. This isn’t Scarsdale, Larry, and you simply don’t commute. We’ll be making our home there for at least five years, perhaps longer.” He smiled again. “If you accept the job, we’ll be working together most of the time. And we’ll probably be together a lot socially, too.”
The warning twinge was no longer that. It had grown into full-fledged recognition. Larry felt the blood draining from his face. He sat quite still, holding his glass to the table with both hands.
“That’s why I’m so delighted Eve is the kind of person she is,” Baxter said.
“What do you mean?” Larry asked, knowing his meaning already, knowing it now before amplification. His hands were beginning to tremble. Hastily, he gulped at his drink.
“Don’t misunderstand me. Your wife could be the queen of England, and I still wouldn’t have offered you the job if you weren’t a good architect.” He paused. “By the way, how’s the Altar house going?”
“Fine, fine,” Larry said. There was a tight knot inside him now. He kept staring across the table at Baxter, knowing what was coming, and yet silently, desperately hoping he was wrong.
“Good,” Baxter said. “But Eve is important. She’s the wife you should have, and the wife I’m glad you have. She’ll help you a great deal on the island. And, of course, I’m being selfish. I like her company, and so does Eloise. We want her with us. She’s one of the reasons I asked you.” His smile widened. “Besides, I was hoping she’d sway you in favor of accepting. Has she?”
“I... I don’t know. You mean,” Larry said, “Eve is... is part of this?”
“Well, isn’t she?” Baxter asked, his eyebrows raising in surprise.
“Of course,” Larry said quickly. “I meant...”
“Do you mean if Eve were against it, would I allow you to take the job anyway?”
“Well, yes. Something like that.”
“Definitely not!” Baxter said. “I believe in marriage strongly, Larry. And I don’t think I’ve seen two people more perfectly suited to each other than you and Eve. If Eve doesn’t want to go, I wouldn’t dream of separating you. Maintaining a marriage is the most important thing I can think of. More important than Puerto Rico. Even more important than architecture. That’s the way I feel about it.”
“I see,” Larry said dully.
“Why? Doesn’t Eve want to go?”
“It’s not that.”
“What is it then?”
“Nothing. We... we just haven’t decided yet.”
“Oh?” Baxter seemed surprised. “I was hoping that was why you wanted to see me today.”
“No, no. I just felt like socializing, I guess.”
“Well, I’m glad you came in. I’m always happy to see you. But bring Eve next time, why don’t you?”
"Strangers When We Meet" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "Strangers When We Meet". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "Strangers When We Meet" друзьям в соцсетях.