"Listen, Susan—"
"Sue, if you don’t mind."
"Were you ever ‘Susan’?" said the man.
"I was christened Susan," said Sue, not taking her eyes off Maya.
"Only the names have been changed," said Maya, sitting down.
"You women are turning out books right and left," said the man.
Maya rolled her eyes upward but seemed to accept the man. "After the book, Dave said I had to follow it up because people knew my name. I said one book was it. Then I got this free-lance design job through a pal of his."
"I’d like to get hold of your book," said the man. "Do you happen to have an extra copy? How do you feel about it now?"
"It was a wonderful book," said Maya.
"Where was the subjugation?" Sue persisted. "I don’t see what it was."
"The book," said Maya. "That’s where it was. It was me by me, forced by him, maybe I should say pushed by him."
"It sounds bigger than both of you," said the man.
"Each thing I did," said Maya, "had to lead somewhere, right? But I was happy as I was, wasn’t I? Dave had to show me off, the gifted lady he lived with. Then that wasn’t enough. He had to give me the gifts."
"I don’t get that," said Sue.
"Neither do I," said Maya. The woman in the yellow T-shirt made change at the table and Maya left a dollar. "Thank you," said Sue.
The woman stood there; she thanked Maya for the dollar that lay on the table.
"But this began quite a while ago," said the man at the other table. "If Dave was a second-generation pig, wasn’t he ahead of his time?"
"He transcended it," said Maya.
"You’re Elsa?" said Sue to the woman. She nodded agreeably.
Sue then didn’t ask what she had been going to ask. She felt sick and asked for a glass of water.
"This is hopeless," said Maya, getting up. "You have to find out for yourself."
"Maybe I’m a second-generation feminist/’ said Sue. "If we have problems, we’ll talk about them."
"I hate all those words," said Maya, turning toward the door.
"What were you doing in Albuquerque?" said the fat man. "You saw the lady’s book in Albuquerque."
"It was still sitting on a bookseller’s shelf after two years. I was on my way to visit my fiancé’s mother in Santa Fe." She stood up wearily.
"What were you doing in Burlington?" said the man.
"Dave has a cottage outside of Burlington. Why are we talking to you?" said Sue.
"And when your child is born," said Maya, "you will have a use for the inevitable extra bedroom."
"I have heard unconfirmed reports," said the man, "that marriage and love make doubtful bedfellows."
"But what else is there?" said Sue.
The man looked at the three women. "Maybe what I’ve been hearing about is first love and first marriage."
"You can’t tell by her," said Sue. "She was a victim of subjugation."
"You’re right, you can’t tell by me," said Maya; "Dave and I were never married."
"I thought so," said Sue.
"Ah," said the man, "the sore point."
"So maybe he’s still interested," said Maya.
"There are different kinds of love," said Sue. Then the fat man said, "You’ve seen him recently?"
Maya said, "What—fifteen, twenty minutes ago."
"You were here" said Sue.
"I was here," said Maya, "and he passed by and looked in the window. It happens."
"Dave," said Sue.
"He was right behind you," said Maya. "I’m sure he couldn’t handle it."
"Handle what?" said Sue, because it was the next thing to say. But this wasn’t the workshop. She hadn’t bugged anybody at the workshop, she hadn’t learned how. You could speak, and what came out was in you and you didn’t always know it except that it would be terribly obvious when it did come out. "But these two men named Dave we’re talking about—" she turned to the man at the other table— "why couldn’t they be the same man? There’s a lot to people."
The man was contemplating Maya. There were tears under her eyes. Her hand held the doorknob.
Elsa shrugged. "I don’t see your husband for a long time," she said.
"He hasn’t been here," said Maya, who held out her hand to Elsa as Elsa moved away from this no-man’s-land without having realized that that was what it was.
"Call it coincidence," said Maya to Sue, with a lot of eye contact.
"That he passed by when you were here?" said Sue.
"You too," said Maya—almost the very thing the Puerto Rican at the deli said when Sue told him to have a good day.
Maya pulled open the heavy glass door, and Sue was waiting for her to step out onto the sidewalk. "Maya, you said Dave had changed his looks with the times."
Maya thought a moment. "Yes, I see he wears a gold stud in at least one earlobe; I can’t blame you for that." The door swung slowly shut. Outside, she turned the other way; she didn’t pass the window. Sue thought they would never meet again. Then she thought, how could they help knowing each other?
"Dave seems to have recovered," said the man with the red mustache. "A man with a gold stud in his ear."
"Actually," said Sue, "it’s a tiny fourteen-karat mushroom."
"Conspicuous but discreet," said the man.
"It’s my Dave. You know that."
"There seems to be a lot of him to go around," said the man. When Sue did not respond, he added, "I mean there’s a lot to him, obviously."
"Do you think he’ll come back?" she asked.
"Oh, he’ll come back," said the man. "But maybe not today. Glad we got the mystery settled. Put two and two together, some days you get three. For a while there, I thought maybe he’d killed himself."
Elsa said, "You want your lemon ice?"
"Trying to get rid of me?" the man said.
"How did you guess?"
"The lemon ice is a work of art," said the man.
"I’ve got to get home," said Sue.
"You mean you want to get home," said the man.
She had been standing, and she almost sat down again. She lifted the glass of water to her lips.
The man said, "I feel I got quite a lot for my money today. But even if we now know that the two Daves are the same man, there’s still plenty to talk about."
At the door, Sue turned to him. "Other people have been through so much," she said. He nodded and smiled.
She was waiting for him to say something good.
"Tell me one thing," he said. "Why was it ‘amazing’ that Dave walked around the house in the morning with his mouth full of toothpaste talking? Maya mentioned it and you said it was amazing."
She was feeling queasy at the thought of that second cappuccino she’d had one sip of. "Now that I think about it," she said, "I was right. He doesn’t do it any more. At least I haven’t seen him."
The man raised his espresso cup. "Good luck," he said.
Her Place Is There
It’s a shower and it’s morning you can report and it’s not just any shower you’d write home about. It’s a shower slow as weight, deep as you both are tall; fast vanishing, steady as the fastest light. A warm-hearted thing, this shower! Shower-power—who cares how it happens dreamt up out of our future into the present? She just reached in behind the shower curtain and turned it on like going to bed, your two hands as near to her as if they were giving a supportive touch to the small of her strong back, this lovable Independent you choose lightly with an unsaid word "Angel" and, taking a shower with her, size her up and she is missing nothing or is anyhow like a question you put off as you take on this glassy fiber, two-for-one insulation against cold, against dryness, this. A show of New York’s famed drinking water on Election Day being economically purified by flowing down over two lovers before draining into all the stone-based drinking fountains of our coastal city’s parks and all the ceramic ones indoors in our hospitals and schools, bless ‘em. Plus through
the shower head is coming hot-poured something, you don’t get a handle on it, does she? does Jean (or Barbara-Jean as she doesn’t prefer to be called). She knows her Hot, her Cold; adjusts her valves with the whole day in mind, voting or not; and no more could you get into words (at least before brunch) what in old New Jersey your once-upon-a-time quirks-and-music but then bottom-line/suicide-magic mother said (according to your grandmother, who survived her): that angels on the margins turn into us and out of us along their spiritual curve while voicing what they seem to need us for—and voicing also what you hardly know is in you at rest.
You left your name out there beyond the bathroom let alone the shower. Brought your light in here. Oh well, here comes the old water down onto the both of you. Your lighted skins grin. Water’s a new element always that does us all a bit of good and she seems less of an age under it, this youngster Jean (or Barbara-Jean). A woman, maybe she know what you not know, she like the water ultra-hot and maybe your bones need marrowing. She’s a near scientist, a science journalist unquestionably contractually, a cook of record, and with some less used ("-car") savvy of remembrance you get in your adopted New Yorker.
Hinterlandsperson come to sound the coast, she felt you were shadowed at the movie house last night by the nameless ponytailed Spence: hanging around there? or a one-night-stand Manhattan moviegoer? Maybe on the job armed, like some hobbyist, to the teeth, though you don’t tell that to Jean— and still haunting the Chilean exile-economist with (you understand) a deal for material on Middle Atlantic banking involvement in Dr. Allende’s brave downfall through level after level of intrigue like burning warehouse or as through stairwell down past deck after deck of ignorant oceanliner—yet Spence knows always about you some trace of you you don’t guess you bear, though you go on pondering the Chilean.
You’ll have to go back to bed, with her or not, because of what the water doing to you, it’s got the shower-power formula let’s protect it if we can. Maybe it is she that’s talking to you, not you (or "Mayn" as you prefer to be called). "Hi, Jim," she does say, for a second not touching. Oh you see she was touched by your saying "Angel" wordlessly; yet more than one female lurks loud in brain-speaker hot to reincarnate, bless ‘em, it’s a strange fashion in the air nowadays, so someone’s got to be there to receive. But which reincarnation? One that makes sense: like at the last instant of approach being in the shoes of what approaches you.
Now you do say a word. "You’re quite an old angel," you croak way down below crust of earth, which just now has levitated to this porcelain-lined above-the-ground floor of a city apartment, bring it up from under your bare toes. What’s in the women-and-men air along gravity-balanced libration points out along Earth-Moon curve? Canny Independent that she is, does she think anyone’s leaning on anyone? taking advantage?
Next question: What does she want of you?—the question you put off. If it hit her that you—He—try to take over a position that she has taken up in advance so it can’t be occupied without aggression (and our only referee has been internalized, which keeps the payroll from getting out of hand), could she kick you—Him—out? But if you are the one being occupied, could you kick her? But if you’re the one being occupied where are you?
The last time you looked, it was her place—the round, dining-room butcher-block table (‘case you need to chop up your dinner by candlelight), and right beside magnum gun-metal bookcase packed tight with the largely paper spines of anthro-historico-botanico-technologico-linguistico tomes is a low, square Mission-style easy chair luxurious ancient relaxer—if it was yourn, you’d plug it in and let it vibe like the motel bed in Buffalo does for a Buffalo quarter; no, it wasn’t your place the last time you looked, not to mention those four-dimensional pictures in the windows of the outside world, across the street fire escapes being farmed and a sight of the sky ploughed by helicopter.
What’s she want from you?
And if you knew, would that mean you had it to give? If your two grown children are truly grown, then you got more spending (-type) money but Jean (Barbara-Jean)’s a young star that gives this original-model but not light-years-seared old space-ship position. One tine of spray now flips out from shower head, walleyeing its route to drill your eye, and you’re not all here, though you woke half an hour ago in bed smelling oil and onions elsewhere in the building, which is the City, which is Election Day ‘76, which is today, onions, oil, a crisping side of unidentified fowl, Jersey chicken, prairie hen, and give yourself to the grandeur of a bulge of cliff, under which a thousand people so much part of the Rock it’s a vein of the cosmos have invented an apartment house: and they live together—nice!—and you’re getting there, they’re almost Indians in territory now belonging to the Federation of Arizone or Holy New Mexico, but you didn’t quite make it out of the shower westward yet.
Italians one floor below her have got a cousin running for office, and it’s not prairie hen cooking; in reality, it was her almond-shaded skin, her shoulder bone bed-shared to your mouth and eyes like sound that opens all the other sounds and sheds them to music; and now, looking again into the water that’s a degree too hot, you guess it’s her shower however much rented because it is her place; she got the keys—two pair.
Meanwhile, back in the bathroom, it’s a shower for sure, the water’s free so long’s you’ve got the good coffee to purify it. It’s a shower but, over her low voice saying, "I like having you here," the flow’s thick like whirring wheels in sun, so when you step back the water you thought was falling turns into legendary Rising Geyser tapped from the automated thoughtfulness of the community: she soaps herself fast like light you hardly follow, let it be, and low down out of sight and upward shining a-grin, her grin as large as last night in the dark you ran your fingers along to find out Is she smilin’? when you’d made a joke—under the canopy of bedroom ceiling where one by one she’s stuck the heavens embedded in all exact constellations each with a future and a message that she knows like she knows better than a man sometimes twice her age happens to know why the orbit of Skylab that you two shared months and more than months ago at Cape Kennedy, decays—or at any rate (speed-factor-curve-plot) both saw fired—and she knows how fast, while at dinner she told of a bone-marrow disease they’re trying to lick, that knobs the bones and swells ‘em closed upon the nerves—of hearing, of sight; and the grin of well-sexed soap now joins her divided flesh there out of sight (if hands and fingers couldn’t see) to your own comfort and surprise, while she so complete next to you soaps you as if she’s found cleanliness aped in her science by the godliness of sport telling you a dream, asking you, imagining you joked about not dreaming: looking with interest, then eye to eye where, in her streaming eyebrows and happy teeth and the blithe little (is it) sinew (?) of play that stares naughty in the round brown (God! violet-flecked!) eyes, you find a message like "Lookee here"—until you hold her shoulders and see right down at what she’s doing (two hands) so that she can happily seem to be self-conscious, for what we buy when we buy soap is tenderness, for she has discovered how to make it rain inside, keep dry and bright outside— but warm and bright inside, too.
It’s a shower, that’s all, but over her low voice saying through the flow that if you did dream what would you dream about, and that she likes having you here (whom she called Recycled Man at dinner last night) the water when you step back almost out of it could be rising, and this geyser and her voice’s backdropped distance reincarnate your belief that you’re in not just a shower in New York but two places, wait and see. Is that why you’re here? Give or take a few inches between your head and the shower’s, for to tell the truth you and she aren’t quite so tall as the shower is deep yet are deepening all the time and helped by the shower. She’s right under the heart-gush of the water while she’s soaping you with her eyes half closed.
She’s reached the coast and is imagining it, but behind you there’s another place and one of the two voices there behind you, the voice of portly, sport-jacketed Navajo Raymond Vigil is saying
down through some bending drone of your still arguably if evolvingly human bladder, "It’s gonna happen." Voice of the Navajo.
You pick up graying lights of water turned yellow and blue through the shower curtain by a misty light bulb—this coastal weather, what’re you going to do? The shower bombarding her lags her busy motions a hair but one of two things are known for sure: not whether she has a boyfriend (inconceivable, considering), or is between boyfriends; only that this wonderful leak in the roof is O.K. and you’re taking a shower with a body on Election Day in New York, which must mean it’s a particular year, you saw a sign in Spanish, No Electioneering, and now hear a boxed shout through the bathroom wall from the next apartment, which God knows may be where those cooking smells originate; and while you’re still waking up to this Election Day in touch with this young woman as you have been for hours, you’re letting go unstable particles of energy such as ye meson here, you muon there, and grinning in your minor stand-up dream as your old chosen journalist colleague Red (of face, that is) Harley, possessed of a speaking voice so lowdown deep it sounded acoustic and should be slowed down by outmoded electrical wiring, sounded the ancient warning of his college swimming coach—sounded like old, tobacco-proofed crust but the vocal cords under the crust had turned to bone, for haven’t seen Harley since running into him and your tall-as-a-rusty-iron-post friend-in-another-and-now-immortal-category (dead) Ted walking the aisles of a train, Ted’s stark profile permanently fixed by its association with plane seats, though here at the moment on the Washington train—Harley’s coach in Indiana who was also called Ted calling down the gaping years words like your own New Jersey coach’s on a November field of stone-cold earth mashed and imprinted by teenage men in cleats, "Don’t stay in the shower, boys, sap ya strath," hollered into the shower room through Red Harley’s memory from the brink of a wintry pool on the Indiana border tiled with bricks of age-old blue-green ice long before Harley learned that he was to spend his life as a bass-voiced newspaperman saving time by spending hours on the phone, following history or preceding it, as he told Jim after a professorial dinner in Washington they’d both got asked to. Keeping one jump behind, added Jim, and they got into some nuthouse laughing—in relief after an evening of Gross National Product yielding never to plenty of tasteless roast beef but, curve upon curve, to Net Economic Welfare floated still on statistics denying the wisdom of an incomes policy—and when the nuthouse laughing ran its course they decided, getting into the elevator at the hotel, to go to church in the morning in Georgetown; agreed on this plan two or three times until in the carpeted elevator a bland or was it blond actor with long saffron sideburns and a silent girlfriend a hair taller than he asked himself along with them. But he was nowhere to be seen next morn, as almost neither were Jim Mayn and Red Harley, though heard deeply croak-voiced wading across the hotel lobby.
Women and Men Page 37