'I'll show you some new ones. Bill and I have an
'What does that mean?'
'I do what I want. And he can go to hell if he doesn't like it.'
'That's some way to talk about a millionaire.'
'Puddy poo.'
When she called on Wednesday, I didn't want to see her again and told her I had a meeting. (I was afraid of Bill, and I didn't think I ever wanted to see again someone who had called me
'I'm at the hair dresser,' she said on Thursday the week after.
'I was expecting you yesterday,' I lied again.
'You'll have to take me when you can get me. Let's have lunch.'
'It can't he done.'
'I'll pay.'
'It's not that.'
'You think I'm homely?'
'No. I think you're sexy as hell.'
'So does he, puddy poo.'
'Who?'
'The guy I'll meet instead. You're not the only fish in the sea, baby. We'll talk about you.'
'Does he know me?'
'We'll have a big laugh.'
'Who is it?'
'That's for me to know and you to find out.'
(I began to feel she had the whammy on me.) I began to believe she would come up to the office unannounced at any time just to make a fool of me in front of the others there.
'You're afraid of me, puddy poo, aren't you?' she taunted prankishly the next time we met at a party, and she did indeed — while my wife and her husband observed from different parts of the house — tweak my nose. 'Isn't he, Mrs. Slocum?'
'I wish he were afraid of me,' my wife yelled back.
'Call me Wednesday,' I ordered her curtly. 'And I'll show you how afraid I am.'
'I'm at the
'I think I've got the flu,' I apologized with a snuffle.
'I thought you might, baby,' she chirruped pleasantly, 'so I brought along a list. And I do mean baby. You come on much better at parties. You're not the only fish in the sea.'
I wish I had her on her knees again right here right now. Alongside Virginia. I've done it with my wife here in my study many times. My wife and I go on honeymoon sprees still, lashing all about the house and grounds in frothing spasms. We need liquor. We've done it in all the rooms by now except the children's and Derek's nurse's. We've done it in our attached garage at night when we did not want to risk waking up anybody inside, and we've done it outside in the darkness on soaking wet grass. (If we had a swimming pool, I'm sure we'd try it in there at least once.) We've done it on our redwood patio furniture. I whiff her dense perfume again (and turn around to look). Of course her husband knew. I wonder how he stood it. I know it vexes me almost beyond toleration — I could bang bricks against my head with both hands — to recall I was called
'This time it's true,' I explained. 'I have to be out of town. Let me call you when I get back.'
She sounded unexcited both times, as though all the tittering had run out of her. She didn't seem to care.
'It's all right,' she said. 'You're okay. My looks are gone. I lost them overnight.'
She and her husband split up, and both have moved away. The children were all at college. The house stands empty and no one knows if it's for sale. I suppose my wife and I will have to split up finally too when the children are away at college. I hope it doesn't have to happen sooner while I'm changing jobs at the company or while my daughter is still mired indecisively in adolescence and high school and my boy stands rooted numbly in terror of Forgione and rope climbing and gives no sure indication yet of whether he will make his way up or down. She has nothing to do.
'I have nothing to do.'
She has nothing to do but align herself unpassionately with the new women liberationists (although all that blatant discussion about orgasm, masturbation, and female homosexuality makes her uneasy).
'That's only because,' I inform her, 'you've been conditioned to react that way by a male-dominated society.'
She is not certain whether I am siding with her or not.
'Why should you,' she wonders dejectedly, 'have all the advantages?'
'Do I seem to you,' I answer mildly, 'a person with all the advantages?'
'You've got a job.'
'Get a job.'
She shakes her head with a soft snicker. 'I don't want to work.' (She does have a sense of humor.)
'Do you want more money?'
'It's not money. You always think it's money. I've got nothing to do.'
'Have love affairs. Commit adultery.'
'Is that what you want?'
'It's not what I want. I can give you more money, if it will make you happier. I'll be able to.'
'That's not what I want. There isn't anything I
'Cure cancer. Money isn't shit, you know.'
'Please don't get mad at me tonight.'
'Money is love, baby, and that's no shit. I'm not getting mad.'
'I'm feeling so bad.'
'Don't drink whiskey after wine, and maybe you won't feel so bad.'
'I may be getting my period. You even look younger than I do. And that's not fair.'
'You'll live longer. Women do.'
'But I'll look older.'
'What do you expect, if you live longer? At least you're alive.'
'I was kidding,' she says. 'You don't even know when I'm kidding. It's getting harder and harder to talk to you.'
My own good joke about Freud, money, and excrement went right by her, and I suppose I
'Why did he leave his wife? They have a retarded child, don't they?'
'He fell in love with another girl and ran off with her.'