Nowhere City

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Nowhere City Page 29

by Alison Lurie


  “When’re you leaving?” Glory asked.

  “I don’t know exactly. Probably sometime this year.” A week ago Paul had had a very promising letter from his thesis director telling him about a job at Convers College; he was waiting now to hear from them directly. “I’m kind of sorry, now.” He accompanied this avowal with a warm but gentle kiss, intended to convey gratitude and affection. Glory met it at a higher temperature.

  “Mmm. And where’re you going to?” she stroked his leg with her knee.

  “Well, probably to Convers. It’s sort of north of Boston.”

  “That’s in New England. Y’know, I’ve never been in New England.” Glory rubbed his leg higher up, expertly.

  “I wish I could take you with me.”

  “Yeah? I’d like to go. I’ve always had a kind of kooky dream to see that part of the country. All those old-fashioned towns and historical places: I really think I would go for them. There’s a New England set out on the back lot at the studio, with these neat little white wooden houses and big barns and fences and tall trees, y’know. When I was first working at Superb I used to walk through it on the way to where we were shooting Mexican Mamba—what a bomb that turned out to be—and I d’know, it sort of picked me up.”

  “You ought to see the real thing.” The educational impulse stirred in Paul again, along with other impulses. The idea of Glory walking alone through an imaginary village had something pathetic about it, too. “Seriously. Why don’t you take a trip and visit New England?”

  “Maybe I will. I’m so goddamned fed up with all the creeps and phonies in this town. ... Hey! You know what I’ll do?” Taken with her idea, Glory left off rubbing against Paul. “Soon’s we finish making this picture, that’s probably only a couple months, I’ll go East. ... I’d love to walk out on this screwy dump right now, only I couldn’t let Rory and the kids down.”

  “New England is good in the summer,” Paul said. “Not too hot. Cape Cod—”

  “Yeah. That’s what I’ll really do. I’ll take a couple weeks off, Maxie can fix it—”

  “That’s a fine idea.”

  “—and I’ll come and stay with you. Maybe in September, huh? What did you say that place was called?”

  A new image appeared in Paul’s head: a New England college town. Mr. Cattleman, the junior instructor in history, has scarcely arrived, when he is visited by his mistress, a Hollywood starlet with pink hair.

  “Uh—Convers. But it’s a fairly small town, you know. There wouldn’t be much for you to see there.”

  “Aw, I don’t care about that. As long as there’s a lot of nature and scenery. Y’know I really go for the country. I love to get out in the open spaces and run around and look at all the trees growing and grass and flowers. That’s one reason this town makes me so sick.”

  “Yeah, but what I meant was, I’m afraid the people won’t interest you much. Convers is pretty much a college town, mostly students and professors.”

  “But that’s what I’d like most.” In her enthusiasm, Glory sat up. “Shit, you don’t know how much I want to meet some real, serious, intellectual people, professors and thinkers, that you can learn something from. People that don’t spend all their time getting loaded or screwing somebody or pulling a deal over the next guy. I want to go to the kind of parties where everybody is talking about serious things, like art and philosophy and history and those kind of things.” Visions of some academic gatherings he had attended passed across Paul’s mind. In imagination, he added Glory to them, dressed in her pink bathing suit.

  “Uh, well,” he said.

  “Maybe you think I wouldn’t know how to act right with people like that. Listen, I wouldn’t say anything or do anything funny; I wouldn’t want to. All I’d want to do is just sit quietly in a corner and listen to their conversations, and nobody would even notice me.”

  “That’s what you think,” Paul said. Glory turned her face towards his, frowning.

  “I get it,” she said. “You mean you don’t want me to come. You think I would embarrass you or something, because I’m so uneducated and dumb.” Glory’s voice was hostile and hurt; she turned her face away.

  “No; I mean you’re a very beautiful girl, and people are going to notice you wherever you go.” No response. Paul sat up and put his arms round Glory, like a child with an expensive new toy, which he suddenly fears will be taken away from him again. He stroked her neck, her shoulders. “You’re really incredibly beautiful.” No response. “I think it’d be just great to have you visit me in New England.”

  “Is that straight?” Sulkily, Glory turned towards him.

  “Yes.” Calling up the resources of his experience, he pulled her nipples towards him, twisting and squeezing them gently.

  “Ah. ... Yeah, do that. ... Really?”

  “Really.”

  “Listen though,” Paul said a moment later. “I mean, what time is it? Shouldn’t we do something about the house, telephone somebody or something?” He raised his head from her lap; Glory pushed it down again.

  “Sure,” she agreed. “Later.”

  22

  SATURDAY NOON. AN ANONYMOUS crowd of sightseers loitered and drifted along Hollywood Boulevard west of Vine Street. They stopped to gawk at the photos in front of second-story night clubs and dance halls, at the windows of discount dress and hat and shoe stores, at stand-up lunch counters where red, rubbery hot dogs fried and orange drink bubbled perpetually. They entered souvenir shops and bought accordion strings of colored postcards, dummy books titled Los Angeles Confidential (which opened to reveal a toy privy or a naughty plastic doll), pink china vases, and rayon panties with “Hollywood, California” printed on them.

  They were of every age, or no age. The little girls had permanents and nailpolish, sometimes even lipstick and high-heeled sandals, while the mothers or grandmothers who dragged them whining along the sidewalk wore ruffled baby dresses and curled, tinted hair—as if they had changed into each other’s clothes for a joke. Elderly men and women, some at the far edge of their lives, shuffled by, muttering to themselves and fingering their handbags or the parcels they carried. There were plenty of young people too: watchful delinquent boys slouching by in leather jackets, and clusters of teenage girls giggling stupidly and clinging to each other as they swept up the sidewalk. There were family groups of tourists, noisily crude, or silent, because they had known one another too long; and pickup couples blinking as they emerged from five-dollar hotels, noisily crude or silent.

  All these people had something in common: a look of being cheaply made—put together, like the clothes they wore, out of shoddy materials, and colored with harsh chemical dyes. Their faces wore a common expression—that of people anxiously searching for something: for success, for adventure, for love. Or if they had given up these ends, they were at least searching for some excitement; for a scene, a spectacle, a hero to watch. Above all, they were looking, with the intensity of castaways on a desert island, for the beautiful and the famous—looking for stars. Whom, of course, they never found—except for their footsteps in cement in front of Grauman’s Chinese Theater.

  So they wandered under the merciless sun, and Katherine wandered with them.

  What was she doing there? She had come to Hollywood that morning to pick up a new lot of fan letters at the rehearsal studio where Glory was practicing for a charity show (another of Maxie’s gimmicks). Once she had the letters, Katherine could have stayed to watch rehearsal, or she could have gone home on the bus. There was no reason to hang around Hollywood Boulevard, except that it seemed a good place to be miserable in.

  And it was all her own stupid fault; she had done it to herself. She had told Iz that Glory was still in love with him.

  It had taken a while, first to know it and then to tell it. Originally she had believed what Iz said: that Glory had no interest in him any more, that she was glad to be rid of him so that she could go out with Rory Gunn, the handsome song-and-dance star, and get her picture into t
he papers. After Katherine had met Glory, she realized that that could not be completely true, for Glory grew upset over even the mention of Dr. Einsam’s name. But she said to herself that that was simply something Glory would have to get over. The truth was, they just weren’t suited to each other; it was an impossible marriage. As the Social Sciences professors said, it was unhealthy, unbalanced of Iz to have chosen such a wife. And the same thing could be (and was) said on the other side: Mona had confided to Katherine that a lot of Glory’s real friends were glad she had got rid of that intellectual creep, who had no appreciation for her career.

  Katherine herself felt sympathy for Glory. Women, she thought, always have something in common. However different their backgrounds or occupations; they can always meet upon the basic general topics: food, clothes, houses, people. When she, Glory, and Mona discussed men, for instance, it did not seem to matter any more that they were speaking respectively of a Harvard graduate student in history, a European-born psychiatrist, and a small-time Italian gangster. Katherine felt a purely altruistic regret when she first learned that Rory Gunn, the handsome star who had been taking Glory out twice a week in the most public and expensive way, was the same person as the sad homosexual who telephoned her almost every day to report the crises of his hopeless affairs.

  Aimlessly, stopping and starting slowly, Katherine drifted along the sidewalk from one ugly window display to another, her eyes fixed on, but not seeing, trays of glazed chocolate doughnuts, or painted and varnished plaster images of flowers and fruit. Occasionally other tourists bumped into her, but she was usually too late to apologize or acknowledge their apologies, for depression had slowed her reaction time.

  She had known all along, too well, that Iz was still “emotionally involved” with Glory. He admitted it himself, though as a psychological fault. If she were to tell him that Glory was in the same state, she had realized, that Rory was nothing but a publicity stunt, it might send him back to her. At any rate, he should have the choice. But Katherine had kept putting it off, saying to herself: not yet, just a little later. She had repeated to herself, in excuse, Iz’s own statement that his relationship to his wife was “a neurotic attachment to a highly original but basically immature personality.”

  Until the day last week when, arriving at Glory’s house, she found her hunched over a portable FM set, screwing the knobs round and bending the aerial this way and that so as to catch the weak signal of the U.C.L.A. student radio station and hear a symposium in which Dr. Einsam was taking part. “Ssh, just a sec.” She twisted the dial back and forth, and fragments of Iz’s professional voice leaked out into the room, roughened with static. When the program was over, Glory sat up, patted her hair into place, and said to Katherine, “I thought it’d be kind of a gas to hear him shooting his mouth off again, telling the whole world what to think, but you can’t get a thing on this asshole set.” Katherine was not fooled. Throughout the program some analogy had kept eluding her, but now she had it: Glory was Iz’s fan. She treasured these half-audible, irrelevant phrases (“... ya, I would say that ... in this case the existence of a control sample ... essential”) as a fan might the scribbled autograph of her chosen star, or the bent paper cup from which he had drunk.

  Katherine thought that she would not have gone to such lengths to hear Iz’s voice, no matter how long they had been separated; she just did not care for him that much. She didn’t, she realized, want any more of Iz than she had, however much she wanted that. Certainly she didn’t wish she were married to him. Not only that there was (perhaps) something in his suggestion that this affair was a vacation trip for her, something outside of real life. It was also that he was too much the guide of the tour. There was something too preceptorial, even too analytic, in his manner towards her, for what he would have called “a permanent relationship.” After all, to stay with your doctor too long is to confess your illness chronic. If cured, you paid the bill and went away.

  So there had been nothing to look forward to. Iz would never like her any better than he did, while she was in danger every day that passed of becoming more and more—well, the word he would have used was “dependent.” And meanwhile, there was the persistent consciousness that she knew something Iz ought to know, and was keeping it from him.

  It was hard bringing up the subject, since after her first visit to Glory’s house Katherine had stopped telling him what she saw and heard there. She had trained herself, long ago, to be secretive about her employers’ lives. But beyond this, she had wanted to avoid mentioning or thinking about Glory when she was with Iz, because it felt too awful and uncomfortable. The truth was, probably, she should never have got into the situation of working for Glory, and Iz should never have put her there.

  Yesterday at the office she had told him. Iz listened silently, attentively, while she spoke, asking only one question: “Gunn is definitely a fag? Ya, I heard that rumor, but I thought he could be AC-DC.” When she had finished, Iz looked at her. Then, breaking a rigid rule of his about behavior on campus, he put his hand over hers, and said, “Thank you for telling me this.”

  “Oh, that’s all right,” Katherine replied in a thin, formal voice. “I should have done it sooner.”

  “No.” Iz still gripped the back of her hand. “Don’t feel that; there was no need. Unless you wanted to.” She did not answer, or return his look. We can’t say anything more, she had thought, because maybe I’m wrong. Maybe Glory doesn’t want him, but what does that matter, if he wants her? Students passed in the hall; Iz took his hand away, and work continued. Only at the end of the afternoon he had remarked, throwing it off with painful casualness, “So they’re rehearsing for the benefit tomorrow. Hm. They’ll be there all day?” That was all; except that for the first time in many weeks he left the office without making arrangements for her to come to the apartment. All the same, Katherine knew that Iz was at Glory’s rehearsal now. Or more probably, because he seldom got up before noon, on his way there.

  She had miscalculated, she thought; she hadn’t known she would feel like this. If she had known that, she still should have told Iz, but would she have done so? He might have found out anyhow, eventually. But not right now, not today.

  “It’s over. I did it to myself,” she said aloud. “It’s finished.” Talking to herself right out on the street, like a crazy person. She must be in a state to act like that. She was in a state. She must get hold of herself, and do something constructive. She didn’t want to go home: somehow she felt that in the empty house (Paul had gone to work, though it was Saturday) it would all be even worse.

  Ahead of Katherine on the street corner was a news stand, displaying “Home-Town Papers from 50 States” and glossy magazines dealing with every possible hobby and interest, from auto-racing to Zoroastrianism, from birth (Your New Baby) to death (Casket and Sunnyside). The Boston Globe and Herald were there, of course, but she felt no impulse towards them either. They were irrelevant to the people she knew here, the things she had done with them, the vacant pain inside her. Still, the news stand gave her an idea: she would look for some interesting book to read over the weekend, to take her mind off everything.

  There was a large bookstore, the Pickwick Bookshop, almost directly across the street. Katherine stopped briefly at the bargain tables outside, where for fifty-nine or seventy-nine cents you could buy books whose glossy paper jackets were beginning to be rubbed dull and torn around the edges. Inside, the latest successes were piled into bright pyramids. What did she want to read: biography, sociology, history, travel? Katherine disliked most current fiction, but she had a wide range of general interests, and the various jobs she had held had left her with some special ones. But nothing seemed what she wanted. What was it Iz had said, when she complained that she couldn’t find any good new biographies at the library? “Once you’ve tried reality, imaginary lives seem flat.”

  Still, there must be something—She wandered about the crowded store, turning covers over listlessly to read blurbs, lifting books a
nd setting them back, and then simply standing, frowning at the flat colored faces, pictures, and letters.

  “Hello, there.”

  Katherine looked up. Across a table of books, a strange man was smiling at her. Automatically, she began to make her face stiff and blank.

  “I know you. Don’t you work in the H-building?” he continued. “Over at U.C.L.A.?”

  “Oh; yes.” Tentatively, Katherine relaxed her face.

  “You’re working for Smith and Haraki—isn’t that right?”

  “Yes, that’s right.” And Einsam and Einsam, she thought dully.

  “I thought so. I’m Jim McKay.” He came around the counter towards her; a small, pale Irishman with sharp features and black cropped hair. “I’m in Anthropology,” he said, and held out his hand. After a fractional hesitation, due to her preoccupied depression, Katherine took it. The firm, warm touch of another five being acted like a slight electric shock. She focused more clearly on Mr. McKay, who seemed to be about thirty-five and was wearing a blue work shirt, a striped tie, chino pants, and sneakers. She moved the features of her face into a smile.

  “And what’s your name?” he went on.

  “I’m sorry. ... Kath-er-ine-Cat-tle-man.” Katherine felt it incongruous that these, or any similar series of nonsense noises, should belong to her.

  “Katherine Cattleman.” He repeated the syllables as if, at least for the moment, they meant something to him. “And what’s that project? Perception and something. Perception and what?”

  “Delinquency.”

  “Mhhm. Well.” He glanced round the store, as if deciding what to look for next. The insignificant interruption to Katherine’s state of mind was over, and misery began to rise round her again. She stared at the display of travel literature in a fixed way.

  “If you’ve finished your shopping,” Mr. McKay said, “how about having a cup of coffee with me? You look as if you need one.”

 

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