“Carol, would you mind—”
“Tomorrow we’ll go to the stockyards,” Carol said at the same time, and Therese burst out laughing. “What’s so damned funny about that?” Carol asked, putting out her cigarette, but she was smiling, too.
“It just is. It’s terribly funny,” Therese said, still laughing, laughing away all the longing and the intention of the night.
“You’re giggly on champagne,” Carol said as she pulled the light out.
LATE THE NEXT AFTERNOON they left Chicago and drove in the direction of Rockford. Carol said she might have a letter from Abby there, but probably not, because Abby was a bad correspondent. Therese went to a shoe repair shop to get a moccasin stitched, and when she came back, Carol was reading the letter in the car.
“What road do we take out?” Carol’s face looked happier.
“Twenty, going west.”
Carol turned on the radio and worked the dial until she found some music. “What’s a good town for tonight on the way to Minneapolis?”
“Dubuque,” Therese said, looking at the map. “Or Waterloo looks fairly big, but it’s about two hundred miles away.”
“We might make it.”
They took Highway 20 toward Freeport and Galena, which was starred on the map as the home of Ulysses S. Grant.
“What did Abby say?”
“Nothing much. Just a very nice letter.”
Carol said little to her in the car, or even in the café where they stopped later for coffee. Carol went over and stood in front of a jukebox, dropping nickels slowly.
“You wish Abby’d come along, don’t you?” Therese said.
“No,” Carol said.
“You’re so different since you got the letter from her.”
Carol looked at her across the table. “Darling, it’s just a silly letter. You can even read it if you want to.” Carol reached for her handbag, but she did not get the letter out.
Sometime that evening, Therese fell asleep in the car and woke up with the lights of a city on her face. Carol was resting both arms tiredly on the top of the wheel. They had stopped for a red light.
“Here’s where we stay the night,” Carol said.
Therese’s sleep still clung to her as she walked across the hotel lobby. She rode up in an elevator and she was acutely conscious of Carol beside her, as if she dreamed a dream in which Carol was the subject and the only figure. In the room, she lifted her suitcase from the floor to a chair, unlatched it and left it, and stood by the writing table, watching Carol. As if her emotions had been in abeyance all the past hours, or days, they flooded her now as she watched Carol opening her suitcase, taking out, as she always did first, the leather kit that contained her toilet articles, dropping it onto the bed. She looked at Carol’s hands, at the lock of hair that fell over the scarf tied around her head, at the scratch she had gotten days ago across the toe of her moccasin.
“What’re you standing there for?” Carol asked. “Get to bed, sleepyhead.”
“Carol, I love you.”
Carol straightened up. Therese stared at her with intense, sleepy eyes. Then Carol finished taking her pajamas from the suitcase and pulled the lid down. She came to Therese and put her hands on her shoulders. She squeezed her shoulders hard, as if she were exacting a promise from her, or perhaps searching her to see if what she had said were real. Then she kissed Therese on the lips, as if they had kissed a thousand times before.
“Don’t you know I love you?” Carol said.
Carol took her pajamas into the bathroom, and stood for a moment, looking down at the basin.
“I’m going out,” Carol said. “But I’ll be back right away.”
Therese waited by the table while Carol was gone, while time passed indefinitely or maybe not at all, until the door opened and Carol came in again. She set a paper bag on the table, and Therese knew she had only gone to get a container of milk, as Carol or she herself did very often at night.
“Can I sleep with you?” Therese asked.
“Did you see the bed?”
It was a double bed. They sat up in their pajamas, drinking milk and sharing an orange that Carol was too sleepy to finish. Then Therese set the container of milk on the floor and looked at Carol who was sleeping already, on her stomach, with one arm flung up as she always went to sleep. Therese pulled out the light. Then Carol slipped her arm under her neck, and all the length of their bodies touched, fitting as if something had prearranged it. Happiness was like a green vine spreading through her, stretching fine tendrils, bearing flowers through her flesh. She had a vision of a pale white flower, shimmering as if seen in darkness, or through water. Why did people talk of heaven, she wondered.
“Go to sleep,” Carol said.
Therese hoped she would not. But when she felt Carol’s hand move on her shoulder, she knew she had been asleep. It was dawn now. Carol’s fingers tightened in her hair, Carol kissed her on the lips, and pleasure leaped in Therese again as if it were only a continuation of the moment when Carol had slipped her arm under her neck last night. I love you, Therese wanted to say again, and then the words were erased by the tingling and terrifying pleasure that spread in waves from Carol’s lips over her neck, her shoulders, that rushed suddenly the length of her body. Her arms were tight around Carol, and she was conscious of Carol and nothing else, of Carol’s hand that slid along her ribs, Carol’s hair that brushed her bare breasts, and then her body too seemed to vanish in widening circles that leaped further and further, beyond where thought could follow. While a thousand memories and moments, words, the first darling, the second time Carol had met her at the store, a thousand memories of Carol’s face, her voice, moments of anger and laughter flashed like the tail of a comet across her brain. And now it was pale blue distance and space, an expanding space in which she took flight suddenly like a long arrow. The arrow seemed to cross an impossibly wide abyss with ease, seemed to arc on and on in space, and not quite to stop. Then she realized that she still clung to Carol, that she trembled violently, and the arrow was herself. She saw Carol’s pale hair across her eyes, and now Carol’s head was close against hers. And she did not have to ask if this was right, no one had to tell her, because this could not have been more right or perfect. She held Carol tighter against her, and felt Carol’s mouth on her own smiling mouth. Therese lay still, looking at her, at Carol’s face only inches away from her, the gray eyes calm as she had never seen them, as if they retained some of the space she had just emerged from. And it seemed strange that it was still Carol’s face, with the freckles, the bending blonde eyebrow that she knew, the mouth now as calm as her eyes, as Therese had seen it many times before.
“My angel,” Carol said. “Flung out of space.”
Therese looked up at the corners of the room, that were much brighter now, at the bureau with the bulging front and the shield-shaped drawer pulls, at the frameless mirror with the beveled edge, at the green-patterned curtains that hung straight at the windows, and the two gray tips of buildings that showed just above the sill. She would remember every detail of this room forever.
“What town is this?” she asked.
Carol laughed. “This? This is Waterloo.” She reached for a cigarette. “Isn’t that awful.”
Smiling, Therese raised up on her elbow. Carol put a cigarette between her lips. “There’s a couple of Waterloos in every state,” Therese said.
16
Therese went out to get some newspapers while Carol was dressing. She stepped into the elevator and turned around in the exact center of it. She felt a little odd, as if everything had shifted and distances were not quite the same, balance was not quite the same. She walked across the lobby to the newspaper stand in the corner.
“The Courier and the Tribune,” she said to the man, taking them, and even to utter words was as strange as the names of t
he newspapers she bought.
“Eight cents,” the man said, and Therese looked down at the change he had given her and saw there was still the same difference between eight cents and a quarter.
She wandered across the lobby, looked through the glass into the barber shop where a couple of men were getting shaves. A black man was shining shoes. A tall man with a cigar and a broad-brimmed hat, with Western boots, walked by her. She would remember this lobby, too, forever, the people, the old-fashioned-looking woodwork at the base of the registration desk, and the man in the dark overcoat who looked at her over the top of his newspaper, and slumped in his chair and went on reading beside the black and cream-colored marble column.
When Therese opened the room door, the sight of Carol went through her like a spear. She stood a moment with her hand on the knob.
Carol looked at her from the bathroom, holding the comb suspended over her head. Carol looked at her from head to foot. “Don’t do that in public,” Carol said.
Therese threw the newspapers on the bed and came to her. Carol seized her suddenly in her arms. They stood holding each other as if they would never separate. Therese shuddered, and there were tears in her eyes. It was hard to find words, locked in Carol’s arms, closer than kissing.
“Why did you wait so long?” Therese asked.
“Because—I thought there wouldn’t be a second time, that I wouldn’t want it. But that’s not true.”
Therese thought of Abby, and it was like a slim shaft of bitterness dropping between them. Carol released her.
“And there was something else—to have you around reminding me, knowing you and knowing it would be so easy. I’m sorry. It wasn’t fair to you.”
Therese set her teeth hard. She watched Carol walk slowly away across the room, watched the space widen, and remembered the first time she had seen her walk so slowly away in the department store, Therese had thought forever. Carol had loved Abby, too, and Carol reproached herself for it. As Carol would one day for loving her, Therese wondered. Therese understood now why the December and January weeks had been made up of anger and indecision, reprimands alternating with indulgences. But she understood now that whatever Carol said in words, there were no barriers and no indecisions now. There was no Abby, either, after this morning, whatever had happened between Carol and Abby before.
“Was it?” Carol asked.
“You’ve made me so happy ever since I’ve known you,” Therese said.
“I don’t think you can judge.”
“I can judge this morning.”
Carol did not answer. Only the rasp of the door lock answered her. Carol had locked the door and they were alone. Therese came toward her, straight into her arms.
“I love you,” Therese said, just to hear the words. “I love you, I love you.”
But Carol seemed deliberately to pay almost no attention to her that day. There was more arrogance in the tilt of her cigarette, in the way she backed the car away from a curb, cursing, not quite joking. “Damned if I’ll put a dime in a parking meter with a prairie right in sight,” Carol said. But when Therese did catch her looking at her, Carol’s eyes were laughing. Carol teased her, leaning on her shoulder as they stood in front of a cigarette machine, touching her foot under tables. It made Therese limp and tense at the same time. She thought of people she had seen holding hands in movies, and why shouldn’t she and Carol? Yet when she simply took Carol’s arm as they stood choosing a box of candy in a shop, Carol murmured, “Don’t.”
Therese sent a box of candy to Mrs. Robichek from the candy shop in Minneapolis, and a box also to the Kellys. She sent an extravagantly big box to Richard’s mother, a double-deck box with wooden compartments that she knew Mrs. Semco would use later for sewing articles.
“Did you ever do that with Abby?” Therese asked abruptly that evening in the car.
Carol’s eyes understood suddenly and she blinked. “What questions you ask,” she said. “Of course.”
Of course. She had known it. “And now—?”
“Therese—”
She asked stiffly, “Was it very much the same as with me?”
Carol smiled. “No, darling.”
“Don’t you think it’s more pleasant than sleeping with men?”
Her smile was amused. “Not necessarily. That depends. Who have you ever known except Richard?”
“No one.”
“Well, don’t you think you’d better try some others?”
Therese was speechless for a moment, but she tried to be casual, drumming her fingers on the book in her lap.
“I mean sometime, darling. You’ve got a lot of years ahead.”
Therese said nothing. She could not imagine ever leaving Carol either. That was another terrible question that had sprung into her mind at the start, that hammered at her brain now with a painful insistence to be answered. Would Carol ever want to leave her?
“I mean, whom you sleep with depends so much on habit,” Carol went on. “And you’re too young to make enormous decisions. Or habits.”
“Are you just a habit?” she asked, smiling, but she heard the resentment in her voice. “You mean it’s nothing but that?”
“Therese—of all times to get so melancholic.”
“I’m not melancholic,” she protested, but the thin ice was under her feet again, the uncertainties. Or was it that she always wanted a little more than she had, no matter how much she had? She said impulsively, “Abby loves you, too, doesn’t she?”
Carol started a little. “Abby has loved me practically all her life—even as you.”
Therese stared at her.
“I’ll tell you about it one day. Whatever happened is past. Months and months ago,” she said, so softly Therese could hardly hear.
“Only months?”
“Yes.”
“Tell me now.”
“This isn’t the time or the place.”
“There’s never a time,” Therese said. “Didn’t you say there never was a right time?”
“Did I say that? About what?”
But neither of them said anything for a moment, because a fresh barrage of wind hurled the rain like a million bullets against the hood and windshield, and for a moment they could have heard nothing else. There was no thunder, as if the thunder, somewhere up above, modestly refrained from competing with this other god of rain. They waited in the inadequate shelter of a hill at the side of the road.
“I might tell you the middle,” Carol said, “because it’s funny—and ironic. It was last winter when we had the furniture shop together. But I can’t begin without telling you the first part—and that was when we were children. Our families lived near each other in New Jersey, so we saw each other during vacations. Abby always had a mild crush on me, I thought, even when we were about six and eight. Then she wrote me a couple of letters when she was about fourteen and away at school. And by that time I’d heard of girls who preferred girls. But the books also tell you it goes away after that age.” There were pauses between her sentences, as if she left out sentences in between.
“Were you in school with her?” Therese asked.
“I never was. My father sent me to a different school, out of town. Then Abby went to Europe when she was sixteen, and I wasn’t at home when she came back. I saw her once at some party around the time I got married. Abby looked quite different then, not like a tomboy anymore. Then Harge and I lived in another town, and I didn’t see her again—really for years, till long after Rindy was born. She came once in a while to the riding stable where Harge and I used to ride. A few times we all rode together. Then Abby and I started playing tennis on Saturday afternoons when Harge usually played golf. Abby and I always had fun together. Abby’s former crush on me never crossed my mind—we were both so much older and so much had happened. I had an idea about
starting a shop, because I wanted to see less of Harge. I thought we were getting bored with each other and it would help. So I asked Abby if she wanted to be partners in it, and we started the furniture shop. After a few weeks, to my surprise, I felt I was attracted to her,” Carol said in the same quiet voice. “I couldn’t understand it, and I was a little afraid of it—remembering Abby from before, and realizing she might feel the same way, or that both of us could. So I tried not to let Abby see it, and I think I succeeded. But finally—here’s the funny part finally—there was the night in Abby’s house one night last winter. The roads were snowed in that night, and Abby’s mother insisted that we stay together in Abby’s room, simply because the room I’d stayed in before hadn’t any sheets on the bed then, and it was very late. Abby said she’d fix the sheets, we both protested, but Abby’s mother insisted.” Carol smiled a little, and glanced at her, but Therese felt Carol didn’t even see her. “So I stayed with Abby. Nothing would have happened, if not for that night, I’m sure of it. If not for Abby’s mother, that’s the ironic thing, because she doesn’t know anything about it. But it did happen, and I felt very much as you, I suppose, as happy as you.” Carol blurted out the end, though her voice was still level and somehow without emotion of any kind.
The Price of Salt, or Carol Page 19