“Why aren’t I grateful for that information?”
“I could stop off at Abercrombie & Fitch on my way over, and pick up a nice big bell for you. Or maybe a cassette of Frankie Laine singing ‘Unclean, Unclean. ‘ Do wonders for getting you a seat on the subway during rush hour.”
Badinage. Brightalk. Never a discouraging word, and the deer and the antelope play. The ritual incantations of those who had resonated to Salinger. I still had my red baseball cap in the bottom of a carton of old clothes, at the back of the bedroom closet. Nostalgia somehow cannot survive the smell of mothballs.
“I’m here; come on over whenever you’re free.”
“About an hour. We’ll go have a steak. I’m paying.”
I smiled. Naturally, you’re paying. With a five thousand copy printrun of Laurence Bedloe’s most recent astonishment,
“See you when you get here.”
“Take care.”
“So long.”
I listened to the dial tone for about two minutes. Then I sat in the growing darkness, thinking about Arctic tundra. somehow it didn’t make the Carrville Leprosarium seem more attractive.
After a while the doorbell buzzed and I put on some lights and let him in. He had the look of a man who had broken some vows.
“I need a drink,” he said. He fell into the rocker with the leather seat, toed off his loafers, and sank down onto his spine, eyes closed. “By the unspeakable name of the slavering hordes of Yog-Sothoth, though Allah be the wiser… I do fiercely need a drink.”
“Can be done, chum. Give it a speakable name and I’ll put it in your paw in moments.”
He rubbed his closed eyes ferociously. From inside his hands he mumbled, “Any damn thing. Largeish, if you will.”
I went into the kitchen and opened the cupboard and gave the cognac a pass. This looked like heavy weather drinking. I poured Wild Turkey into a big water glass without benefit of jigger, tossed in a single ice cube, raised the level with a little tap water, and carried the BomDer’s Moon back into the living room.
Jimmy was sitting on the floor, in the darkness near the window. I couldn’t see him that well, but I could hear him sobbing. I think I grabbed for the doorjamb to steady myself. In the fifteen years we’d been friends, I’d never seen him cry. I’d never known him to cry. I’d never heard anyone mention that they’ d seen him cry. It had never occurred to me that he might one day, in my presence, cry. I didn’t even know if he was
He didn’t know I was there, staring at him.
Very quietly, I carried the glass over to him, put it down beside his crossed legs, and I went back across the room and sat just outside a pool of lamplight, my face in darkness. I had, no idea what to do, didn’t want to say something wrong, definitely didn’t want whatever I finally said to be banality or homey homily; so I waited. Eventually, it seemed to me, he’d stop, take a drink, and we’d talk.
Eventually he stopped, noticed the glass, reached for it slowly and drank long and deep; and then he looked around for me.
“Here’s a new one for you,” he said.
I spoke softly. “Not so new; I do it all the time.”
A marvelous waiting silence resumed.
Quite a while later he said, “I never asked you: were you pissed off at me for marrying Leslie?”
I thought about the right answer. Not necessarily the kindest answer, or the most polite answer, or the truthful answer, just the right one. “I think we were about done with each other.”
“That’s no answer.”
“It’s an answer. You want others, I can make up others. But that’s definitely
More silence. He finished the drink, I went in and threw a lot of cubes in a mixing bowl, brought the bowl and the bottle, and set them down in front of him. He worked at it slowly. Neither of us would end up alcoholics: we weren’t passionate enough about the juice. Oh hi there, I’m recruiting for Richard the Lion-Hearted; we’re putting together a
Listen, I’ll talk to you later. You go save Mecca, I’ll have a go at writing the Great American Novel, and we’ll meet right next to the big lions on the steps of the New York Public Library two years from now. You can’t miss me, I’ll be the one
“You know, I’ve always felt like your kid brother,” he said.
“It’s only six months, Jimmy.”
“Always felt faintly ridiculous around you. Loudmouthed, gauche, coming on too strong even when I was purposely speaking so softly I knew people had to strain to hear me.”
“It’s only six months, Jimmy.”
“You know I’m a better writer than you, don’t you? Not just sales…
“For Christ’s sake, Larry, there’s nothing but cold dead air blowing through your books. They ought to hand out woolly mittens with every copy of your stuff.”
I thought about Arctic tundra. “Six months, Jimmy; just six months.”
He started crying again. “For Christ’s sake, Larry,
“How about some gin rummy, tenth of a cent a point?”
He got up, went into the bathroom and washed his face.
When he came back he sat down in the rocker, looking bushed. “You ready to talk about it now?” I asked.
He stretched his hands out on the arms of the rocker until the fingertips were just at the edge. Just at the edge. “This open marriage with Leslie is killing me. I can’t stand it.”
It was the first I’d heard of it. When he married her I stopped thinking about anything in that area. I never knew what went on with them in that way. I felt my stomach getting cold. That’s the way I respond to photographs of Dachau.
“So get out of it,” I said.
“Don’t be an asshole.”
“It’s only six months, Jimmy.”
He started yelling. “Give me a break, will you? I’ve got nobody else in the world to talk to. You’re my best friend, maybe the only friend I can really trust. I’m
What I
You’re who you made you, Jimmy; so come off it.
And he went on for about two hours, telling me everything about his life, and Leslie’s life, and my life, and