“But do you have a wife, Mr. Perlou?” she asks. “Do you already have a wife? One that fits your requirements as you have quoted from William Blake, who also wrote about the little lamb?”
The flute player watches with disapproving eyes over his music stand as Mr. Perlou doesn’t answer her question. He looks as though he doesn’t believe her neck should be under Mr. Perlou’s chin, nor her skirt up around her waist. She is wondering if everyone watching feels the same way.
What if they should go down? (But they continue to go up.) Everyone still out watching them under those lights as they go down (but they still go up). “Ah, going down now, we see.” “Yes, going down for a change.” “We see that even going down is difficult when someone has done something to their foot, though we don’t know what it is. Unless, Mr. Perlou, you should put her on the banister.” But still he could keep his grip on her breast and she her shoulder under his chin. They could go down the banister like that together, with her head hanging back and his other hand still at her crotch, sailing down, coasting down, gathering speed and swinging their legs out at the corners, having time to giggle again and then, for a moment at least, she would forget the pain, thinking: Gregory, Gerard, Harold, Hilary, Ralph, the beat of blood, the smell of beer, and perhaps the flute player would play faster and some of the light bulbs might be burned out by then, and what would there be to be guilty of, going down like big bugs making love as they fly and singing, “Oh, sometimes it’s daylight till nine or later.”
“Good-bye, everybody.” Waving to them. Nothing but faces on the way down. Blurring out. “Good-bye.” Get out the orange Kleenex. Wave. “Oh, we are fed up, too.” “Bye-bye. Bye-bye.”
But still they go up.
And the child is waiting, listening to them come.
Triquarterly, 1968
New Worlds, March 1968
Animal
THE FIRST day of the animal the sun came up yellow over fog. A woman from the Century Arms apartments walked her three dogs early but hurried back within ten minutes. Her breath was visible. Later on, a man, carrying a cane and wearing a tan overcoat, paused at the corner of the small park where the woman had walked the dogs and buttoned up his collar. The sun of the first day of the animal had, by now, turned orange and the man’s breath was not visible. The animal, as might be expected on his first morning, slept late. At eleven he was given a bowl of shredded wheat, a glass of milk and two slices of buttered toast but he refused to eat any of it. This was expected, too. He did, however, drink sixteen ounces of water from a pail left in the corner for him and this was considered a very good sign.
He was found, of course, in the deepest part of the forest.
The second day of the animal all the windows frosted over. People woke up early and even the night watchmen went home whistling. Something in the air. The barometer was rising. The man of the tan overcoat took ten deep breaths, blowing out alternately from the right and left nostril. The woman who loves dogs enjoyed the cold on this, the second morning. She has never been married and she has a history of dating unsuitable men in spite of the dignity and self-assurance of her posture.
The animal still does not eat. He has watched out the window for a long time. What is he dreaming? his keepers wonder, that confinement is a question of degree? measured less by bars than by the perspectives behind them? by the vistas from the windows of his third-floor room in the office building of the keepers and hunters, so the question may not be, after all: Are the doors locked? but Where would they lead to once they are opened, if such a time might ever come? And are the answers, whatever they may be, all the freedoms he can hope for?
It was said, on the second day, that he did not look too unhappy. At lunchtime a keeper of a particular sensitivity brought him both a grilled cheese sandwich and a hamburger so that it might be seen what his preferences were, but still he ate nothing.
Some intelligence seems to shine in his eyes. The keepers all feel he may be conscious of some meaning in their words, no doubt interpreting them in his own way. The keepers say he may dimly understand the significance of his position in their midst. Perhaps he wishes for more elements from which to draw conclusions. One keeper feels that if he had a drum and a flute he might make some kind of music and these are supplied but he only taps his fingers on his chin.
There’s much to do: wash him, cut his nails, clip his mane. (All those curls and, underneath, his head is found to be the same size as everyone’s.)
There are no marks of the capture on the animal except where the ropes had rubbed into his wrists and ankles. It was said he had suffered no more than a nosebleed at the time and yet he had killed two of the hunters with his bare hands. They had dropped him as they entered the city early that morning. He was tied, hands and feet, to a pole and supported by four of them and they had come into the city singing rounds and swinging him jauntily. This was after the last bus had gone back to the center and after the last bus driver had gone to bed and not a taxi in sight. They had stumbled as they came down the embankment and he hit the sidewalk with the back of his head and grunted. His nose began to bleed again; however, many of the hunters had had worse than that from him so not one of them thought to apologize.
On the third day the animal ate—scrambled eggs and bacon, toast, orange juice—and it was considered that the most important hurdles were over and, since the weather continued fair, it was felt by most of them that no one would object if the animal was allowed some fresh air in some small nearby park, provided some pants could be put on him and kept on. Still, it was argued by a minority that this was not necessary for an animal. Others said that it wasn’t at all a philosophical question as to when and when not animals might need to wear trousers or even what might constitute animalness, but more a question of simple physiology and that anyone with eyes could answer it and, what’s more, would answer it undoubtedly in favor of pants.
Since the keepers all dress alike in gray coveralls, it was decided that one of these would be the simplest to keep on him and, with a small combination lock at the top of the zipper, there could be no danger that the animal might remove them himself at some inappropriate time.
The woman walks her dogs four times a day. She is tall and always wears black or white with a red hat. Father figures tempt her, hunters and keepers, men she can count on to give her advice and encouragement though one wouldn’t suspect this from her assured attitudes.
The animal is graying at the temples. His eyebrows have grown bushy. There are hairs in his ears. Perhaps his hard life in the deepest part of the forest has aged him. Actually the man in the tan coat appears to be the same age and might make a proper husband even though he hasn’t yet been married and, at his time of life, one would suspect strange vices. Yet he could afford a wife and he has kept himself remarkably fit. He doesn’t smoke. Unfortunately he never passes the Century Arms at quite the right times for any chance meetings to occur and neither do the animal and the woman meet, this third day, but if he has an odor, subtle and savage, that is certainly what makes her take off her white scarf and open the top button of her coat. What if she is conscious of some secret origins? (Perhaps all the townspeople are.) Then she may feel some organic kinship at this smell and from it she might draw conclusions about her past and maybe even about her future. Now the dogs slink with their tails between their legs. They are black retrievers though she can have no use for their inborn talents at the Century Arms. The only water they ever see is in their bowls or rain but the weather continues fair. It grows warmer. It is thought that the animal might be permanently installed in the small park, where he would see the sun and yet be out of the public’s way to some extent. It is thought an imitation cave with a heater and a cot might do well enough and a private bathroom with shower stall. Some keepers wonder if even a heavy wire mesh will be strong enough to hold him. It must cross the top of the cage for he is nimble enough to climb almost anything with a toehold. There happens to be a suitable spot there already which once ho
used squirrels, foxes, a raccoon and an owl. It only needs enlarging and refurnishing.
Chance encounters sometimes lead to warm friendships and at their first meeting she offers the animal a cigarette which he accepts graciously with a little nod of thanks. Unfortunately, under these circumstances, she would have to play rather the dominating role in the relationship and yet appearances are so important that his expression alone may lead her to believe in his abilities as adviser and encourager. The mesh makes things simpler in many ways. She might bring him little presents of coffee in containers to go, or ice cream or something she has baked herself, and she will never need to wonder why he hasn’t brought anything to her. She can put herself in a mother role and act out a part she would prefer he played, perhaps thinking he will learn from her, yearning to tuck blankets round his chin, to rub his back, always speaking softly.
Others come and watch him as they watch the goldfish in the pond or how far the crocus has come up. Someone has somehow taken pictures of him naked and sold them surreptitiously. The man in the tan overcoat bought a set of five but he doesn’t meet the woman that day in front of the animal’s cage as the creature chins himself on a branch of his ginkgo tree. If he were here, she might pay some attention to the man in the tan coat, more than she ordinarily would. Everything has become physical and even under their overcoats they would have felt themselves to be there in the flesh.
Neither of them has yet received the invitation to the party that will celebrate the installation of the animal in the park. There has been a delay in hopes that warmer weather will come in the next week or two. The hunters and keepers will be there as well as most of the people in the nearby apartments such as the Century Arms. It is felt that perhaps the animal will pick up some valuable hints on the nature of civilized behavior from this event, though, of course, he can’t be blamed for the two killings that occurred at his capture. Some of the townspeople have wondered what would have happened at that time had he been captured by other townspeople than hunters, had, for instance, the behaviorists come upon him first, or the Freudians, or more especially the Jungians. Some of the keepers themselves, and many have become quite fond of him, argue that there would have been no deaths, yet others say he has turned on them in anger more than once, though they managed to get out of his way in time, but they can’t say for sure if these were only threatening gestures.
Yet suddenly, before the invitations can be sent, the animal escapes. No one can understand quite how. At night there’s the policeman to check now and then. The lights are kept burning all around the park and yet he’s gone. There are reports of four rapes that night, and goodness knows, the townspeople say, how many unreported. One can’t be sure who committed them. (There has already been much thought about his possible animal wife or wives, his animal children, perhaps whole colonies of animals living in shelters under the roots of fallen trees, nested in coarse skins and covered with lice. Perhaps they run in packs.) In any case, it may well be that the women of the townspeople seem extraordinarily desirable to him or perhaps it’s just his superb physical shape or his animal nature and maybe he isn’t responsible for the rapes at all.
Once the woman had come in late afternoon and whispered “Apartment 5A” as though by some miracle he could come to her open window five floors up. Many of the townspeople have exaggerated ideas of the animal’s abilities, but still, he has escaped miraculously, no one can tell how. Perhaps as he shaved himself in the mornings, his thoughts had turned to the functioning of doors and locks and maybe the woman had left him a bobby pin or dropped one by the wire mesh where he could reach it. Perhaps the key to her apartment, by some strange coincidence, also fit the door of his cage.
And certainly, these moonlight nights, the woman would have liked to reinvent love on a higher plane, liked to consider it from many angles and choose those most likely to satisfy in the longest run of all. And suppose there are to be thoughts also on the new man or a new mankind? a new movement of which the animal might be the leader and she might play the role of sister to the animal, a position without emotional dangers, in which she can permit herself a certain degree of closeness while waiting for some ritual sacrifices to take place. And she wants love tests also for herself to pass, and a period of fasting, a building up of muscles and mental capacities, some way to prepare herself while she waits for his token, a severed finger, ear or toe. Who knows what rites he practices? These days the ceremonials among the towns-people are dying out. Who remembers what the wedding ring really stands for?
She must have remembered to be happy in spite of a lack of participation in that first night of the escape, and he must have remembered to be careful not to let his beard grow.
He was found ten days later eating a hamburger and French fries in a diner in a distant city, wearing an astrakhan hat, sun-glasses and smoking Marlboros. He did not resist recapture and was taken by taxi to the airport with no incidents. Positive identification wasn’t difficult even though he had changed his name and adopted many new mannerisms.
A double lock is put upon his door and a guard to warn the townspeople not to come too near. It is felt new hobbies will have to be found to occupy his time. Someone has contributed an old upright piano. Others have brought last month’s magazines, paint sets, colored pencils, a banjo. There is a general understanding among the townspeople that there comes a time in everyone’s life when new decisions must be made, new directions taken, new resolutions formulated. The townspeople recognize this phase as it becomes manifest in the actions and attitudes of the animal. After all, he is, they estimate, at about that age when such a change is due, and he must understand, in some vague way of his own, that in spite of his marvelous physical condition, he has passed the peak of his powers, so they are watching the new selfawarenesses bloom in him along with new generosities and new dissatisfactions. Surely he is asking not only what is the purpose of life, but more specifically, what will he make the purpose of his own life. Now he takes up new pleasures and discards old ones. He revolves slowly to music by the townspeople’s best-loved long-dead composers. He dances with his eyes shut. He taps on the mesh. He seems to understand or at least to react to counterpoint and fugue. He receives a daily newspaper and a good deal of mail addressed to occupant. He writes: Once I crouched, flea-bitten, eating raw roots. Once I never heard of shirt tails, socks and tie tacks. I slept on ferns.
By now it is the fifty-first day of the animal.
He is writing poems on shredded-wheat cardboards and old envelopes, but this time of year the younger townspeople roller skate in the park. The sound of their wheels on the sidewalks bothers the animal as he sits thinking what to write down next or when he is studying a book on style. He has a list of nouns expressing movement and a note to remind himself to put a short sentence next to a long one. Lately he has studied the role of mystery in fiction of every form, but now, probably because of some special feeling for the lady with the dogs and knowing her address from before, he writes: Dear Madam: I must apologize for the night of April second, 1965…. She won’t be sure what he is apologizing for even though it was not a fulfilled night for her as it may have been for the animal.
He has already attended two cocktail parties in his honor and one literary tea and he has returned to his cage without complaint. The extra guard may soon be removed. Someone has given him a tan corduroy jacket with leather patches on the elbows. Many townspeople have found him extraordinarily attractive, especially in a cocktail party setting. The combination of a rugged, even dangerous-looking face, white teeth, a well-cut jacket, a delicate touch upon a martini glass and a bit of primeval shyness is irresistible and none of the male townspeople have blamed the female townspeople for their susceptibility. One woman has sent him three bottles of champagne, another a suede vest and an imported shoehorn. One has knit him a sweater, which he will certainly put to good use since the heating in his cave is not particularly good and the imitation-stone door has never closed well. He would have liked an electr
ic blanket, which might not have been any more expensive than the champagne, but he certainly must know that he cannot choose in his position.
One woman has asked if he might be let out in her custody. She has, no doubt, realized the distractions of the park with its roller skating and its gaping visitors, with even the guard wanting to join into some sort of communication with the animal. She has felt this isn’t in the best interests of his art.
She would like to install him in a section of her summer house where he might have a suite of rooms over the garage. She hopes he will be of use as a fourth for bridge and secretly she imagines that the animal will not be aware of her age as she is interested in a certain aspect of his animal nature. The morals of a case like this may be questioned, but the answer is certainly not clear-cut.
But this would be just for the Easter vacation and perhaps for next summer. Of course, she realizes that the townspeople need this attraction for their park and that the animal belongs to all the people and not just to her but she feels he needs a change if only for the sake of his art. Where will his new ideas come from? she asks, and wouldn’t a wild creature do better in the suburbs than in the center of town? at least for a while? People must have sympathy and understanding for all the wild creatures and if she can’t have this one she might consider taking a gibbon instead, or a young fox.
She has already gone to the jewelers to have a silver chain made with which to lead him to breakfast, lunch and dinner.
But he has written: Dear Madam: I would like to accept your kind offer of the use of your house in the country, but I’m afraid I have other plans over Easter. However, I may be available for the summer, especially after August first. Perhaps you will consider some alternatives since, as you are well aware, all of us wild creatures would enjoy a week outside the town. I would suggest you contact the keepers as to which animals will be the most suitable. Very truly yours, the animal.
The Collected Stories of Carol Emshwiller, Vol. 1 Page 22