the years. He was in no mood to deal gently with her.

She felt his angry hands close on her arms and jerk her forward so that her face snapped up to his. “Now what’s all this about?” he said.

“I’m going downtown,” she said.

“To Vega’s?”

Beth looked away. “Let go of me, Charlie.”

“Answer me, Beth.” He had no intention of letting go until she confessed what she was up to. And maybe not then.

“Vega’s downtown, at the Knickerbocker. She wants some cigarettes and things, and I told her—”

“Cigarettes!” he flared. “And things! What things?” When she refused, panting with indignation, to tell him, he said disgustedly, “And booze I suppose. And you’re going all the way into Hollywood in the middle of the night to take them to her. Good God, Beth, I didn’t know it had gone this far.”

“What’s that supposed to mean!” she cried. “I haven’t done anything wrong! You have no right to hint that I have.” She was furious with the strength of her fear; the fear that always rose in her like a red wall at the suggestion of abnormality and shut off her judgment and good sense. Her voice stirred the children, asleep in the next room.

“You haven’t done anything wrong yet,” he amended. “But you go down there tonight and you will.” He was so cold, so bitter, so chagrined that she quailed at the sight of him. The moment his hands dropped from her arms, as if she were too wretched for him even to touch, she turned and fled from him, snatching up a coat from the hall closet. The liquor and cigarettes were ready in a paper bag on the hall table and she grabbed them on the way out.

In the bedroom Polly woke up and began to cry. Beth heard her when she started the car, and she wondered at every panicky second why Charlie didn’t stop her, why he didn’t run after her and shake her till her bones came loose, or strangle her. She could feel his fury like a tangible thing wafting to her through the mild night air. Backing out the driveway with dangerous haste she felt that if she had not been fighting mad herself, desperate and determined, his anger would have swallowed her up and subdued her.

She drove down the Pasadena freeway and into Hollywood, her mind stewing. If Charlie hadn’t made such a fuss there wouldn’t be any trouble. I’ll be home in the morning, the kids don’t ever need to know the difference. And if he could only realize—oh, God, make him realize—how happy I can be if I just have somebody to love. To have fun with. Somebody like Vega. Why doesn’t he understand how good I can be to him? How patient with the kids? If he could only share me, just a little bit, just once in a while, with…with a woman.

She was amazed to find herself reasoning like this: Beth, who hadn’t given a conscious thought to other women for nine years; Beth, who thought she was solidly normal for so long, who even married a man on that conviction; Beth, who had turned Laura Landon out of her life one day many years ago with such reassuring feelings of superiority and normalcy. That Beth, that very same girl, was tearing through the night on a fool’s errand at the whim of a beautiful spoiled woman who probably didn’t give a damn what her personal feelings were.

Vega: Beth saw her in her mind suddenly, whole and clear, every detail of her, as she had seen Laura in her dream some weeks before. Strangely, life was worth living for a woman like that. Problems could be solved, boredom could be faced, chores could be accomplished, if Vega could only love her. With love, with passion, with romance in her life again, Beth’s children would be more bearable. She could love them again because love was being reawakened in her and there would be plenty to go around. Why couldn’t Charlie see it that way, see what joy and peace his family would know if Beth were only satisfied?

She felt a flare-up of stinging resentment at his apparent selfishness. He’d understand one of these days; he’d have to. Beth was so eager for Vega’s company, so full of pleasure and trembling anticipation, that nothing could have stopped her then, not even the thought of Charlie’s wrath.

She pulled off the freeway and into the stop-and-go traffic on Hollywood Boulevard. The great avenue was a strip of brilliants pasted on the black night. It might have been past two in the morning but it was Friday night, too, and the big brassy street was humming. Lights twinkled and flashed, announcing a hundred shows, a thousand succulent and sinful beauties, a million laughs. Posh shops displayed their slick wares in a weird radiance unknown to the daytime hours.

And the people swarmed down the walks and across the street looking urgently for fun, dressed in their courting clothes or their tourist sport shirts. They smiled at every light, every open door, every burst of commercial good humor. Beth watched them when she had to stop for lights, and they did not strike her as pathetic or lost or bored. They were having fun, they were all dressed up, and they were doing Hollywood right. She even found herself envying them.

The night clerk buzzed Vega’s room for her, giving Beth a narrow-eyed examination all the while. “She says come up,” he said, leaning toward her on the counter.

“Thanks.” Beth turned away, but he called her back.

“Miss,” he said and smiled at her sparkling eyes. “She’s been giving us a rough time tonight. We’re not supposed to take stuff up after midnight. And those girls with her are pretty noisy. I wonder if you’d tell her to tone it down a little. Would you mind?” He glanced at the paper bag full of whiskey under her arm.

“She’ll tone it down,” Beth said. “You won’t hear a

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