Wives and Lovers

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Wives and Lovers Page 19

by Margaret Millar


  “Kindness,” Mrs. Freeman said. “You’re going to need more than kindness before you’re through. Well. I told you I get feeling blue at night like this, don’t pay any at­tention to me. Goodnight.”

  “Goodnight.”

  Ruby set her alarm for six. Then she took off her coat and hung it in the closet, moving slowly because she dreaded to go to bed and lie in the darkness, thinking. I get feeling blue at night like this. She would have liked to read for a while but there was no reading light in the room. The crudely painted Mexican pottery lamp on the bureau didn’t work, and the only other light in the room was the ceiling light with a chain suspended from it. The chain was too short to reach, so someone had tied a strip of pink cloth to the end of it. Ruby pulled the strip of cloth, then lay on the bed with her eyes open, wondering why Gor­don had come and what he was going to do.

  We’re a pair, both victims, can’t fight back. In the darkness she shook her head violently as if Gordon was there to witness her denial. In the same motion she denied Mrs. Freeman too: You’re going to need more than kindness.

  No, no, her head rocked back and forth on the pillow. They don’t understand about me, I’m tough. I’m tough.

  When she came downstairs in the morning Gordon was already awake. He was sitting on the couch holding his head in his hands. She came toward him, very shyly, as if she were half-afraid he wouldn’t remember who she was.

  “Are you all right, Gordon?”

  “I’m fine.”

  She sat down beside him. He was pale and his eyes were bloodshot. The pulse in his temple was beating hard and fast.

  “Thanks for letting me sleep here,” he said. “What time is it?”

  “A little after six.”

  “The beginning of a new day.” He turned to look at her, smiling. “You brushed your hair out. Last night you had a scarf around it, you looked very pretty.”

  “I didn’t think you’d remember.”

  “I remember everything, I think. I’ve got to go out and buy some clothes.”

  “It’s Sunday.”

  “I forgot. Well, I’ve got an old outfit at the office, I can wear that.”

  “You have clothes at home.”

  “I’m not going home. It’s too bad it’s Sunday. That’s going to make things harder, getting some money, etcetera.”

  “Why do you need money today?”

  “I told you, I’m not going home. I’m running away, I suppose you’d call it. I haven’t run away since I was seven and I’ve forgotten how you go about it, but I think money is pretty essential. I hope you’ll come with me, will you, Ruby?”

  “Gordon—listen Gordon, you’re not still sort of half-drunk?”

  “I’m sober.”

  “What about Elaine? Did you talk to her?”

  “Yes, we had quite a talk,” Gordon said dryly. “Last night.”

  “Did you tell her you were going away? With me?”

  “No, I’m going to let her be surprised.”

  She looked at him anxiously for a moment. “Gordon, what is this? Are we just going on a little holiday, or are we going to stay together for good? I know, maybe I shouldn’t ask that—”

  “We’re staying together. God knows what she’ll do. I’m hoping she’ll get a divorce. I’m hoping she’ll realize when I’m gone that that’s what she’s wanted all along.” He got to his feet. His head felt heavy and brittle, and for a minute he could see nothing but blackness shot with flashes of light. But his physical discomfort merely ac­centuated the peace in his mind. Elaine had freed him. She didn’t intend to, but she had, and now he was free. He said, “We’ll drive over to my office for some clothes and then we’ll have breakfast, I’ll bring you back here and you can pack your things while I’m trying to gather together some money.”

  “I haven’t much to pack.”

  “More than I have.” He glanced down at her, smiling at her earnestness. He would have liked to bend over and kiss her but he was afraid his head might split in two. He put his hands on her shoulders. “We’ll never come back to this town, Ruby.”

  “We’ll have to. This is where your work is.”

  “I’ll sell my practice and start another one, wherever you want to go.”

  “I’ll help you,” she said. “I’ll work hard.”

  “We’ll start all over. I hate this town, I never want to see it again.”

  She stared up at him, thinking, he will never love me the way I do him, I am looking forward just to being with him, and he’s looking forward to getting away from Elaine—not the town, he doesn’t hate the town, it’s just that she’s in it. But it doesn’t matter. I’m lucky and I’m tough.

  She turned away and began to fold the blankets on the couch. A desert wind had began to blow over the moun­tains in the middle of the night and the blankets felt dry and dusty. Everything in the house was covered with a film of powdered sand, and there was a rawness in Ruby’s throat and nasal passages.

  When they went outside the wind was still blowing, warm and furious. Gordon’s car was gray with dust, and still the dirt came spinning along the road. The houses trembled, as if a procession of freight cars was lunging up the tracks.

  The keys were in the car.

  “It’s a nice day to get out of town,” Gordon said.

  They drove to his office and Ruby waited in the car while he went inside. It was quite a while before he re­turned, wearing the gabardine slacks and shirt that he kept for golfing. He looked very stern when he got back into the car.

  “Gordon, you’re sorry to be leaving?”

  “No,” he said quietly. “I was just looking around for the last time. Sentimental, isn’t it? I’m not sorry I’m leav­ing. I would just like to take some things with me. It’s funny how you can get attached to an electric machine. Habit, ownership.”

  “You don’t have to sell your practice, Gordon. Couldn’t we just go away for a while and then we could come back and you could start to work just where you left off?”

  “That’s the hard way.”

  “Why? You haven’t tried it. People in this day and age don’t look down on a man for living with a woman.”

  “An insurance man, maybe not, or a truck driver. But a schoolteacher, a doctor, a dentist—it’s not enough to be able to teach or perform an operation or fill a tooth. We have to set an example. This isn’t L.A. or Hollywood, Ruby. They’re a hundred miles and fifty million light years away. My ability to fill teeth isn’t half as important as my morals.” He shook his head. “No, I couldn’t swing it, I’m too soft. It would hurt me if they said, ‘I certainly will not pay him any five dollars for cleaning my teeth just so he can spend it on that woman he’s living with.’ Don’t look surprised. People are funny, they’re pretty hard on people who do some of the things they themselves would like to do. So what I’d get if I stayed here is just that—unpaid bills, patients who want a bargain because they figure I couldn’t afford not to cut my prices, and maybe a few new patients who believe that any dentist who lives in sin should be willing to sell drugs on the side. No, I couldn’t face it.”

  He added, after a time, “I don’t dare hope she’ll divorce me. She doesn’t believe in divorce, but there’s a chance, maybe, if she can come to believe that it would be better for her, too. It would be, of course. She’ll never be happy living only to spite me. It’s funny about Elaine. I think that if she’d never married me she’d have been all right. She wouldn’t be so filled with vengeance and petty spite. Maybe even yet she will have some kind of decent life with a little softness in it.” A gust of wind blew a piece of newspaper against the windshield. It shivered there for a minute and then lurched wildly off down the street. “Where would you like to have breakfast?”

  “Any place that’s open,” Ruby said.

  They drove down Main
Street. The sun had already risen and in the distance they saw the sheen of the ocean. But the town looked dead, parched by the hot wind. Along the curb were abandoned cars under a pall of dust. Two women were hurrying across the street heading into the wind, shielding their eyes with their hands. An old man sat on a bench at a bus stop, like a victim resigned to the sacrifice, his legs apart, his lunch pail resting on his stomach, his head thrown back with his neck ready for the knife. The old man moved, coughed, spat into the gutter. A cardboard box rolled down the sidewalk and a piece of ripped awning flapped against a store window. A painted sign swung in the wind, squeaking on its hinges. The supple palm trees leaned to the ocean, their fronds streaming out like seaweed, and the air was filled with a continuous rustling noise.

  It wasn’t a very high wind, like the wind that came in from the ocean and blew the fog off the top of the moun­tains and cluttered the beaches with kelp and stranded starfish and pieces of tar from the underwater oil wells. Gordon liked the sea winds, they were natural, they suited the town. But the desert wind was an intruder, an alien from the other side of the mountain. Sometimes it hung around for days, like an unwelcome guest in the house who produced tension but must be tolerated. Gordon felt the tension in his hands as they gripped the steering wheel, and in his throat which seemed swollen and grimy.

  Yet he was grateful to the wind, too. It was a good day to be leaving, a day when the town looked unnatural, squalid, hidden under scurf. He let his mind dwell, de­liberately, on the things he didn’t like in the town. Over on Gioconda Street, where the highway bisected the town, lay the nucleus of the slum section. Here lived the Ne­groes, the Mexicans, and the remnants of what had once been a large Chinese community, in sagging shacks and chicken houses and barns. These slums were worse than anything he had ever seen even in the large cities. If they had existed in Chicago or New York, at least some at­tention might have been drawn to them, but here they were ignored. The rickety children played in the dirt on Gioconda Street and went to school when they had clothes and shoes to wear, or to the General Hospital if they got sick enough. The town bulged with doctors and elaborate clinics, but many of the residents of the slums felt that it was easier to die than to make the long trek out to the General Hospital and wait all day for a turn, only to be told to eat more eggs and T-bone steaks, take a long rest free from worry, go to Arizona, wear a custom-made truss, buy contraceptives, take vitamin pills. Every Saturday morning they came to Gordon’s office for free dental treatment and Gordon had come to dread this day in the week because he, too, had to give them impossible advice: If you could try to keep Susie off carbohydrates, Mrs. Haley. Sure, sure, Doc. Say, I still got this awful pain in my side and I been told I oughta have an operation on my insides but I got my cleaning jobs to do, I can’t take no time off with all those mouths to feed.

  He forced himself to think of Mrs. Haley. When she first came to the office she had the holes in her teeth plugged with candle wax. She had all her children with her, for moral support, and Gordon had given them each a ride in the dental chair, two at a time.

  Thinking of Mrs. Haley, he was sure that he hated this pretentious little town. It wore culture on its head like an ageing, kittenish dowager, wearing a picture hat with artificial roses, and needing a good hot bath.

  He was glad to be leaving.

  The only place they could find open was the lunch room across from the S. P. station. The counter was already half-filled with railroad men. They talked back and forth to each other and to the two waitresses. One of the men took a snapshot out of his wallet and passed it to the stout waitress.

  “Gee whiz,” she exclaimed. “They’re cute! They’re as cute as bugs! You musta had a good-looking iceman.” She handed the picture to Ruby. “Pass it along, will you? It’s Joe’s twins.”

  Joe’s twins were standing in a playpen wearing identi­cal expressions of surprise.

  “They are cute,” Ruby said. “Aren’t they, Gordon?”

  Gordon glanced briefly at the picture and passed it on.

  “They don’t like to have their pictures took,” Joe ex­plained. “Maybe scared of the camera.”

  “G’wan,” said the waitress. “You probably beat them. G’wan, admit it.”

  “You’re a great kidder,” Joe said.

  The waitress brought Ruby and Gordon some scram­bled eggs. She had a good-natured, careless attitude that reminded Gordon of Hazel. He hadn’t, until that mo­ment, thought of trying to get some money through Hazel. Hazel wouldn’t have any herself, not enough anyway, but if he gave her a check she might be able to cash it through George Anderson.

  Without tasting his eggs, he went to the phone booth and dialed Hazel’s number.

  12

  George didn’t get up till noon on Sundays, and when the phone started ringing before eight he struggled out of bed, cursing.

  “George? It’s Hazel. Are you all right?”

  “Why shouldn’t I be?”

  “Oh, I don’t know. Sometimes you take things like last night kind of hard and I wanted to make sure you were feeling all right because I’ve got something important to ask you.”

  “Ask ahead.”

  “I need some money for a friend of mine. Today. Right now.”

  “How much?”

  “Five hundred dollars.”

  “You give me a pain,” George said.

  “Listen to the deal first before you blow a fuse.”

  “I’m listening.”

  “Well, this friend of mine is going on a holiday. He intended to leave tomorrow but he’s got this chance to leave today and he needs five hundred dollars. He’s giving me a check and I’d like you to lend me the money so I can give it to him, and then tomorrow morning I’ll cash the check at the bank and pay you back. See?”

  “It sounds damned peculiar. I can scare up the money, maybe, but why the complications?”

  “Because. Will you do it, George?”

  “No.”

  “For heaven’s sake, why not?”

  “If your friend wants five hundred dollars bring him over here. Then if he has an honest face and a reasonable balance in his bank book, I’ll cash a check for him.”

  “No. It’s better the way I suggested.”

  “Why?”

  “Well, he has a joint account with his wife, see, and his wife doesn’t know yet that he’s going away. If the check’s made out to me I can be at the bank sharp at ten when the doors open, and if I see her there I can just push ahead of her.”

  “Holy catfish.”

  “That’s what he told me,” Hazel said, stubbornly. “If his wife suspects that he’s going away she might try and draw out all the money before this check can be cashed. Now do you understand?”

  “It sounds like a perfect set-up for you to keep your nose out of.”

  “Wait a minute, I want to close the dining-room door. I think Josephine and Harold are getting up.” There was a pause. “It’s all right now. They can’t hear.”

  “What difference would it make if they did?”

  “This friend of mine doesn’t want everybody to know his business.”

  “He’s running out on his wife, is that it?”

  “Yes.”

  “Why?”

  “My gosh, George, do you have to know everything?”

  “Five hundred bucks,” George said, “is five hundred bucks.”

  “He’s got his reasons.”

  “I hope you know what you’re doing, aiding and abet­ting whatever you’re aiding and abetting.”

  “I know, all right.” She thought how surprised he would be if he knew too. She felt a little sorry for George that he should have to finance Ruby’s and Gordon’s trip, but it was, actually, for his own good. Eventually he’d be glad and realize that Ruby would never have married him any­way. “
It’s a matter of principle,” she said, her conscience leaping slightly. “Will you get the money, George?”

  “I guess I can try.”

  “You’ll do it. You have hundreds of friends.”

  “I can’t think of a better way of losing them.”

  “Everyone’s going to be paid back. This friend of mine is a very respectable man. Just because he’s leaving his wife doesn’t mean he’s a crook.”

  “All right. I said I’d try.”

  “Shall I pick it up at your apartment?”

  “No.” He didn’t want Hazel to see the apartment in its present condition. It hadn’t been cleaned for a month. “How about meeting me at the Beachcomber?”

  “When?”

  “In an hour or so.”

  “I’ll be there.”

  “I still hope you know what you’re doing,” George said gloomily.

  “You’re always such a pessimist where money’s con­cerned.”

  “Five hundred bucks is—”

  “Yes, I know, George. Anyway, this is very nice of you. I appreciate it. I’ll do something for you someday.”

  “Cut the violins,” George said and hung up.

  He got dressed and made his breakfast. This was the part of living alone that he hated most, getting up to an empty apartment and having to make his own breakfast. When they were married Hazel had always cooked very elaborate breakfasts. She told everyone that George had a large frame to fill, and she filled it, in the mornings, with hot cakes and sausages and fried potatoes and blueberry muffins.

  The kitchen was a mess and the refrigerator smelled sour, jammed with odds and ends of stale food. He man­aged to find three eggs, one of them cracked. He fried them while the coffee percolated. Some day he’d have to clean out the refrigerator but he didn’t know how to go about it. It seemed kind of drastic to take everything out, and he wondered if women had some special easy system for cleaning out refrigerators, and what they did about the smell.

  While he was drinking his coffee he counted the money in his wallet. Forty-seven dollars. That meant shopping around for the difference, four hundred and fifty-three dollars. There was some cash in the safe at the Beach­comber but he had made it a rule not to touch any of it and not to borrow any money from the till even for twenty-four hours. It was the kind of thing that, once started, was hard to stop, and he was afraid his partners wouldn’t like it if they found out.

 

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