XIII
I met Janet Evason on Broadway, standing to the side of the parade given in her honor (I was). She leaned out of the limousine and beckoned me in. Surrounded by Secret Service agents. “That one,” she said. Eventually we will all come together.
XIV
Jeannine, out of place, puts her hands over her ears and shuts her eyes on a farm on Whileaway, sitting at the trestle-table under the trees where everybody is eating.
XV
JE: Evason is not “son” but “daughter.” This is
XVI
And here we are.
PART TWO
I
II
As I have said before, I (not the one above, please) had an experience on the seventh of February last, nineteen-sixty-nine.
I turned into a man.
I had been a man before, but only briefly and in a crowd.
You would not have noticed anything, had you been there.
Manhood, children, is not reached by courage or short hair or insensibility or by being (as I was) in Chicago’s only skyscraper hotel while the snow rages outside. I sat in a Los Angeles cocktail party with the bad baroque furniture all around, having turned into a man. I saw myself between the dirty-white scrolls of the mirror and the results were indubitable: I was a man. But what then is manhood?
Manhood, children? is
III
Janet beckoned me into the limousine and I got in. The road was very dark. As she opened the door I saw her famous face under the dome light over the front seat; trees massed electric-green beyond the headlights. This is how I really met her. Jeannine Dadier was an evasive outline in the back seat.
“Greetings,” said Janet Evason. “Hello. Bonsoir. That’s Jeannine. And you?”
I told her. Jeannine started talking about all the clever things her cat had done. Trees swayed and jerked in front of us.
“On moonlit nights,” said Janet, “I often drive without lights,” and slowing the car to a crawl, she turned out the headlights; I mean I saw them disappear—the countryside blent misty and pale to the horizon like a badly exposed Watteau. I always feel in moonlight as though my eyes have gone bad. The car—something expensive, though it was too dark to tell what—sighed soundlessly. Jeannine had all but disappeared.
“I have, as they say,” (said Janet in her surprisingly loud, normal voice) “given them the slip,” and she turned the headlights back on. “I daresay that’s not proper,” she added.
“It is
“I am very sorry,” said Janet.
“Who are you looking for? There’s nobody here. There’s only me.”