by Irwin Shaw
Brewer, the engineer, grinned.
On the floor, Herres was looking up at Archer in the control room and invitingly lifting his hand as though he had a glass in it.
“The actor is making a significant gesture,” Archer said, nodding to Herres. “Would you say that was beer or bourbon in his hand?” He started out of the room, passing Barbante, who was still sitting slumped in his chair, tapping a cigarette on a heavy gold case. Barbante was the writer for the program and, as usual at these moments, he had a derisive and challenging look on his face. He was a small, thick man with a long dark head. He dressed like a diplomat and always exuded a musky smell of expensive toilet water. Archer liked to avoid Barbante after a show.
“The script worked out very well,” Archer said, sniffing the perfume distastefully. “Didn’t you think so, Dom?”
“Oh, I thought it was peachy,” Barbante said. “Just peachy. Sir Arthur Wing Pinero just twirled twice in his grave in envy.”
“All personnel,” Archer said, staring down at Barbante, disliking him, “are hereby advised that, as of this date, all scripts are to be scorned on the writer’s own time.”
“You asked me, amigo,” Barbante said, smiling up, “and I told you. I thought it was peachy. So sad, so funny, so brainless. I may ask for a raise next week.”
“Mr. Archer, Mr. Archer.” It was Pokorny, struggling into a trench coat behind him. Archer recognized the warning wail of complaint in Pokorny’s voice and sighed as he turned to face him. Pokorny had on a long wool muffler and a stiff, reddish tweed suit with trousers that were too long for him. The trench coat was almost pink and was stained with grease over the round bulge of Pokorny’s stomach. With it, Pokorny wore a black velour hat, snapped down all around over his long, thin gray hair. Fully dressed, he looked as though he had been turned out by a demented governess who had an uncle who played in a military band. He came very close to Archer and grabbed his arm. “Mr. Archer, in the most respectful terms, it is necessary to talk about the insolence of the conductor.” He had a singing Viennese accent and he never blinked his eyes and Archer always had the feeling that he wanted to sit on your lap when he talked about his music.
“I thought the score was fine, Manfred,” Archer said mildly, being polite and using Pokorny’s full name because he knew Pokorny hated to be called Mannie.
“Of course, it is probably not in my place to say,” Pokorny gripped Archer’s sleeve more tightly. “But I feel it is my duty to tell you that every value was one hundred percent wrong.” Pokorny’s mouth quivered moistly. “I merely put myself on record. The conductor refuses to talk to me, so I advise you—it should be sharp, it should be hard like diamonds for the proper values. And what do we get—a flood of sentimentality, a Niagara of whipped cream, a Rhine of molasses.”
Archer smiled. Gently he withdrew his sleeve. “I know, Manfred. You’re right. I’ll do something about it for next week. Depend upon me.”
Pokorny bowed. “I am in your debt,” he said formally. He picked up a brief case stuffed with musical notepaper, and went out. Talent, Archer thought, watching the retreating, righteous back, sometimes assumes alarming shapes.
He went through the door and into the studio. Barbante followed him, holding a soft black overcoat over his arm. Barbante strode purposefully over to Miss Wilson, who was the prettiest girl on the program and who had been with them for only a week. She was talking in a corner to a character woman, pretending not to be waiting for Barbante. That size, Archer thought with a flick of envy, that face, you’d never think they’d wait so anxiously for him. Barbante, the fragrant bachelor. There must be something about him that only women can detect. At any distance up to a mile. And they do it on instruments when the visibility is bad. Archer watched the girl’s nervous, surrendering smile as Barbante came up to her, and turned away, feeling unpleasant.
Alice Weller approached him and he arranged his face. You had to be gentle with Alice because she was unlucky and because in the last two years she had suddenly lost her looks.
“How was I tonight?” Alice was asking softly, peering nearsightedly at him. She was wearing a terrible hat that sat on her head like a breadboard. “Did I do what you asked in the second scene?” she asked in her low, rescued voice.
“You were wonderful, darling,” Archer said. “As usual.”
“Good.” Alice flushed and her hands moved with aimless pleasure over her bag. “You are nice to say that.” Then, trying to keep the pleading out of her voice, “Is there a chance you’re going to need me again next week, Clement?”
“Sure,” Archer said heartily. “I’m almost positive. I’ll give you a ring. Maybe we’ll have lunch.”
“Oh,” Alice said, “that would be awfully nice. I look forward to it …”
Archer leaned over and kissed her cheek. “Good night, darling,” he said, and she flushed again as he walked away.
“Gambling,” Herres was saying as Archer approached him, “gambling is the curse of the workingman.” He was matching quarters with Stanley Atlas. “I’ll be with you in a minute, Clement. I have him lined up for the knockout now.”
“Stanley,” Archer said to the Negro actor, who was digging into his pocket for more coins, “you were slow again tonight.”
Atlas took two quarters out. “Was I?” he asked mildly.
“You know you were,” Archer said, irritated with him. “You’re milking laughs to death.”
Atlas grinned. The scars on his cheek looked like grayish quotation marks when he smiled. The scars were surprising on him. He had a quiet, secret face and it was hard to think of him going any place where people would be likely to fight with razors. He seemed slight in his well-cut clothes and his speech, unless he affected an accent, was clear of any trace of his Tampa childhood. “My public expects it, Clem,” he said, playing with the quarters. “The voice of the dark, lazy South. The sluggish rivers, the willows on the bank, the mules on the dusty roads …”
“When was the last time you saw a mule?” Archer asked,
Atlas grinned again. “1929. In a moving picture.”
“Anyway,” Archer said, annoyed with the neat dark face over the white collar, “from now on, when I ask you to go faster, go faster.”
“Yassuh, Boss,” Atlas said, “Yassuh, Boss, you bet, Boss.” He turned back to Herres and lost the two quarters.
O’Neill came through the door, buttoning his overcoat. O’Neill’s coat was lined with mink, the gift of an actress wife who had a lot of money. He sometimes wore a derby hat. Archer admired O’Neill’s courage in wearing a mink-lined coat, especially with a derby hat. Right now, O’Neill had his serious face on, which was incongruous, like a beard on an alderman.
“Ah,” said Herres, “the mink-lined O’Neill.”
“Hello, Vic,” O’Neill said. “Stanley, Clement. Nice show tonight. The sponsor was pleased.”
“Tonight,” said Archer, “we die happy.”
“Clement and I’re joining my wife for a drink,” Herres said. “Come along with us?”
“Thanks,” said O’Neill. “Not tonight. I’m busy.” He turned to Archer. “Clem, can I talk to you for a minute?”
“Be with you in a minute,” Archer said to Herres and followed O’Neill across the studio to a corner. The studio was almost empty now and the sound man was seated at the piano, idly playing scraps of songs. “La Vie en Rose,” the sound man played, forgetting the noises he was paid to make professionally, the sound of rain, the sound of footsteps on a gravel path, the sound of auto accidents. Then he switched to a song about a warm, non-existent island in the southern ocean. He didn’t play well, but he played with feeling, and you could tell the sound man longed for distant, quiet and melancholy places.
O’Neill stopped and turned toward Archer. “Listen, Clem,” O’Neill whispered hoarsely, “there’s a little party somebody’s giving the sponsor and he wants you to come.”
“Sure,” said Archer, wondering why O’Neill had to cross the room and whi
sper this information. “We’ll just go to Louis’ and pick up Nancy Herres and we’ll come along later. What’s the address?”
O’Neill shook his head. “No,” he whispered. “Herres isn’t invited.”
“Oh,” said Archer. “Let’s skip it, then.”
“The sponsor said he’d like to talk to you.”
“Any time from nine to five,” Archer said. “Tell the sponsor I’m an unpredictable artist after business hours.”
“OK,” said O’Neill, visibly controlling his temper. “I’ll tell him you’ve got a headache.”
“Lies,” said Archer, “are the foundation of all decent social relations. You’ll make somebody a wonderful hostess some day, Emmet.”
O’Neill didn’t answer. He was staring at Archer, his dark blue eyes baffled and friendly. He reminded Archer of a bulldog struggling to communicate with the human race, walled in by the lack of language.
“I’m sorry, Emmet,” Archer said. “But I promised Vic.”
“Sure,” O’Neill nodded vigorously. “Don’t worry about it. Will you drop into the office tomorrow? There’re a couple of things I have to talk to you about.”
Archer sighed. “Friday’s my day of rest, Emmet,” he said. “Can’t it wait?”
“Not really. It’s important. Say eleven o’clock …”
“Eleven-thirty. I expect to be sleepy tomorrow morning.”
“Eleven-thirty,” O’Neill said, putting on his hat. “And don’t call me up and say you can’t make it.”
“O’Neill, you’re an exploiter of labor.” Archer peered at O’Neill curiously. “What’s so important about it?”
“I’ll tell you tomorrow.” O’Neill waved and went out without saying good night to Herres or Atlas.
The sound man sat at the piano and worked at a complicated arrangement of “Some Enchanted Evening.” He made it sound mournful, as though every time he had been in love he had been jilted.
Archer shook his head, dismissing O’Neill and his problems until eleven-thirty the next morning. He picked up his hat and coat and went over to Herres, who had taken all of Atlas’ quarters by now and was reading a newspaper, waiting.
“OK,” Archer said, “the barroom detail is ready for action.”
“Mercy killing is the question of the day,” Herres said, tapping the newspaper. He got into his coat and they started out of the studio, waving good-bye to Atlas, who was waiting for a friend. “Doctors with airbubbles, husbands with breadknives, daughters with police revolvers. You never saw such violent mercy in all your days. It opens up completely new fields of saintliness. At the trial of the war criminals after the next war, the euthanasia society will conduct the defense. The hydrogen bomb was dropped in a temporary access of pity. Saved whole populations from the pains of cancer and living in general. Air tight. What jury would convict?”
Archer grinned. “I knew that finally somebody would prove how dangerous air can be,” he said. “Memo to all radio executives—treat air with caution.”
They got into the elevator and plunged twenty stories in a low howl of wind.
Outside the building, New York was deceptively clean and shop windows glowed down the dark avenue. Taxis swept past in the light traffic and you could almost taste fine crystals of salt from the rivers in the air. It was still early and Archer felt that there was a great deal that might be done with the evening.
He started walking uptown, with Herres striding beside him. They were both tall men, and although Archer was almost ten years older than Herres, he walked briskly, with a healthy, solid way of planting his feet. Their heels echoed in rhythm against the shut buildings and they had the street to themselves as they went north, into the wind.
They walked in silence for a block. Then Herres said, “What’s wrong with O’Neill? He looked as though he’d been bitten in the ass by an ingénue.”
Archer grinned. You had to be very careful with Victor. He didn’t seem to be noticing anything, but he took everything in, and was barometer-sensitive to the slightest changes in the emotional climate.
“I don’t know,” Archer said. “Maybe the sponsor sneezed during the commercials. Maybe a hatcheck girl rubbed his mink the wrong way.”
“Mink,” said Herres. “The Class A uniform. To be worn for parades, court-martials and when leaving the post. Do you think O’Neill’ll vote Republican now that he’s so warmly dressed?”
“I doubt it,” Archer said gravely. “The entire O’Neill family suffers from tennis elbow from pulling so hard and so long on the Democratic levers on the voting machines of a dozen assembly districts.”
“For he’s a jolly good fellow,” Herres said, “with his balls in a sponsor’s sling.”
Archer smiled, but he felt the click of criticism in his brain. Ever since Herres had come back from the war he had salted his speech constantly with barracks images, no matter who was listening. Archer, who felt uneasy when he heard profanity, had protested once, mildly, and Herres had grinned and said, “You must excuse me, Professor. I’m a dirty man, but I got my vocabulary in the service of my country. Patriotism is a four-letter word. Anyway, I never say anything you can’t find in any good circulating library.”
This was true. It was also true that most of the people Archer knew spoke loosely, in the modern manner, and Archer always had an uncomfortable sense of being spinsterish and old-fashioned when his inner censor made these private objections. But he had an undefined sense that when Herres spoke in front of him in the tones of a sergeant’s mess, a hidden flaw in their friendship was being momentarily exposed.
Archer shook his head, impatient with his reflections. Probably, he thought, it’s some hangover from the schoolroom, the inextinguishable core of schoolteacher in him, everlastingly herding phantom students into proper channels of deportment. Consciously, he resolved not to allow himself to be annoyed the next time.
“I had a thought,” Archer said, “while watching you tonight, Victor.”
“Name it,” said Herres. “Name the thought.”
“I thought you were a very good actor.”
“Mention me in dispatches,” Herres said, grinning, “the next time you go up to Division.”
“Too good for radio.”
“Treason,” Herres said gravely. “Biting the hand that murders you.”
“You never have to extend yourself,” Archer went on seriously, looking into a bookstore window. The window had a display of books from the French, all celebrating despair in bright, attractive covers. Collaboration, guilt and torture, imported especially for Madison Avenue, at three dollars a copy. “Everything’s so easy for you, you win every race under wraps.”
“Good blood lines,” Herres said. “My sire was a well-known stud in Midwestern stables. His get took many firsts. In the sprints at second-class meetings.”
“Aren’t you curious to see what you could do against tougher competition?”
Herres looked thoughtfully down a side street. “Why?” he asked. “Are you?”
“Yes,” Archer said. “On the stage. Where you could be fully used. You’re a good type. You’re still young-looking. And you’ve got a simple, open face, with the necessary touch of brutality in it for the older trade.”
Herres chuckled. “Hamlet, 1950,” he said, “wearing his major H.”
“Listening to you reading Barbante’s silly lines,” Archer said, “I get a sense of waste. Like seeing a pile driver used for thumbtacks.”
Herres smiled. “Think how comfortable it is,” he said, “for the pile driver to be asked only to handle thumbtacks. Last forever and be as good as new a hundred years from date of sale.”
“Think about it, dear boy,” Archer said, as they turned down Fifty-sixth Street.
“Dear boy,” said Herres. “I won’t.”
They smiled at each other and Herres held the door of Louis’ bar open for him. They went in, out of the cold.
The first drink was fine, after the day’s work and the brisk walk. Nancy hadn�
�t come yet and they sat at the bar, on the high stools, rolling the cold glasses in their hands, enjoying watching the bartender handle the bottles and the ice.
Woodrow Burke was sitting by himself around the curve of the bar, staring into his drink. He looked drunk and Archer tried to keep from catching his eye. Burke had been a famous correspondent during the war. He was always being spectacularly caught in surrounded towns and burning airplanes and because of this specialty his price had gone very high in those days. Since the war he had become a news commentator on the radio and his washboard voice, hoarse with criticism and disdain, had for awhile been the disturbing incidental music at dinner tables all through the country. He had been fired suddenly over a year ago (his enemies said it was because he was a fellow-traveler and he said it was because he was an honest man) and since that time had sat in bars, deciding to divorce his wife, and announcing that free speech was being throttled in America. He was a fattish pale young man, with bold, worried dark eyes, and with all that weight he must have landed very hard the time he had to bail out of the airplane. During the war he had had a reputation for being very brave. He had grown much older in the last year and his tolerance for alcohol seemed to have diminished seriously.
He looked up from his drink and saw Archer and Herres. He waved and Archer saw the gesture out of the corner of his eye, but pretended not to. Carefully, Burke got down from his stool and walked, steadily but slowly, around the curve of the bar toward them, holding his drink stiffly to keep it from spilling.
“Clem, Vic,” Burke came up behind them, “we who are about to die salute thee. Have a drink.”
Archer and Herres swung around in their chairs. “Hi, Woodie,” Archer said, very heartily, to make up for the fact that he was sorry Burke had come over. “How’s it going?”
“I am sinking with all hands on board,” Burke said soberly. “How’s it going with you?”
“Fair,” Archer said. “I’ll probably live at least until the next payment on the income tax is due.”
“Those bastards,” Burke said, sipping his whiskey, “they’re still after me for 1945. The Vosges Mountains,” he said obscurely. “That’s where I was in 1945.” He stared gloomily at himself in the mirror. His collar was rumpled and his tie was damp from spilled whiskey. “Were you there?” He turned pugnaciously on Herres.