Authors: Laura Zigman
“Whatever you do, do
not
call him,” I said, writing
DO NOT
CALL!
in big block letters and underlining it three times. “Calling him will only make it worse.”
Joan stopped pacing and exhaled into the phone. “This is exactly what happened to you. The minute you and Ray were supposed to move in together, he stopped calling.”
I put the notebook down. “That’s a tactful way of putting what happened,” I said. “But essentially, yes. That’s right. He ‘stopped calling.’ ”
“So why is it so hard to see it coming when it’s happening to you?”
I closed my eyes, and when I opened them, I saw Ray prancing by my office, looking as happy-go-lucky as he ever had. But I also felt an odd sense of something—relief, probably—that, for the first time since the fall, it seemed that Joan truly understood what I’d been ranting about all those months.
“Uch. I feel sick to my stomach.”
“Joan, Joan, Joan,” I moaned. “You don’t know the half of it.”
But she did, unfortunately, get to know all of it over the next few weeks—the unanswered phone calls, the vaporizing of a “love” affair into thin air, the sleepless nights, the obsession. He called her only twice after they came back from L.A., and both times it was to cancel dinner.
Subject appears to be engaging in dash-and-hide method of escape
.
It didn’t look good.
And it especially didn’t look good when Jason’s name appeared in boldface on Page Six along with the bluebloods announcing that the two of them were now an item.
Motherfucker!
I spat into the notebook that night.
So much for scientific objectivity.
I wasn’t ready yet to tell Joan about the notebooks, but the
next morning when she called, I couldn’t help giving her a taste of my findings on commitmentphobia and pathological narcissism. She was fascinated. Perhaps it was Jason, or the combination of Jason and Ben, but she suddenly seemed to have a voracious curiosity about what I was finding and a renewed interest in Eddie’s behavior. Not to mention a truer understanding of me
vis-à-vis
Ray. Night after night I filled her in, and sometimes even during the day, if some late-breaking situation with Eddie warranted it, I would call her at the office, and she would tell her assistant to hold her calls so that she could listen intently and process all the “new” information about men we now had.…
womanizer
(woom-e-ni-zer)
n
a man who pursues or courts women habitually; a philanderer
philander
(fi-lan-der)
vi
(of a man) to make love with a woman one cannot or will not marry; carry on flirtations
cad
(kad)
n
a man who behaves dishonorably or irresponsibly toward women
lothario
(lo-thar-e-o)
n
[
Lothario
, seducer in the play
The Fair Penitent
(1703) by Nicholas Rowe] a man whose chief interest is seducing women
Romeo
(ro-me-o)
n
1: the romantic lover of Juliet in Shakespeare’s
Romeo and Juliet
2: any man with a reputation for amatory success with women
Casanova
(kaz-e-no-va)
n
1: Giovanni Jacopo, 1725–98, Italian adventurer and writer 2: a man known for his amorous adventures; rake
Don Juan
(don wan)
n
1: a legendary Spanish nobleman famous for his many seductions and his dissolute life. 2: a ladies’ man or womanizer; romeo
Don Juanism
n
SATYRIASIS
satyriasis
(sa-te-ri-e-sis)
n
abnormal, uncontrollable sexual desire in a male
“I should just marry this one. She’s definitely a wife,” Eddie said matter-of-factly, glass of Scotch in hand. He paced back and forth across the living-room floor in front of me the way he always did when he was contemplating the acquisition—or disposal—of a wife:
Step step step turn
.
Step step step turn
.
Step step step turn
.
Not looking up from my copy of
The Social Life of Monkeys and Apes
(Zuckerman, second edition), I feigned indifference. This was not the first time that Eddie had come home from a party and announced that he had met his wife, only to announce two weeks later, without a trace of irony, that he had met another. I’d recorded it all in his notebook:
Case wives: #1–23
.
Ages: 22–34
.
Preliminary diagnosis of Subject E: satyriasis
.
But despite the way of all his previous case wives’ flesh and the fact that the chapter on baboons I was reading was a real page-turner, the familiar twinge of curiosity overtook me and I remembered the new purpose of my living arrangement with Eddie:
Research.
Inserting a bookmark in mid-chapter, I approached the cage and threw Eddie a banana:
“So …” I said leadingly.
But Eddie didn’t seem to hear me, lost as he was in the
stream-of-consciousness comparative-shopping thought processes I now knew by heart:
Step step step great body nice legs good breeding turn
.
Step step step but she’s a blond ectomorph and I prefer brunette mesomorphs turn
.
Step step step she’s smart but not smart enough which could be a problem since she has to be smart enough to “get” me which could be difficult as I’m very complex turn
.
Step step step what did I do with my cigarettes? Stop
.
He frisked himself, and finding a near-empty soft pack of Camel Ultra Lights in the torn breast pocket of his oxford cloth shirt, he shook out a wrinkled cigarette and lit it, then continued his slow, pensive three-step.
Now, where was I? Oh, yes, the question of hair color and whether or not she’ll be able to keep up with me intellectually
.
I shifted uneasily on the couch.
This excessive pacing and interior monologue was a radical departure from Eddie’s usual post-cocktail-party, prenuptial ebullience. If I was going to make the most of his willing—if unwitting—participation in my research, I realized I was going to have to extract the reasons out of him. And while my objective, echoing method of questioning (“It sounds like you’re
angry
that she’s an ectomorph.”) usually achieved maximum results, this time, because memories of Ray and the wanton polygamy of the male stump-tailed macaque I had just read about had made me mad, I said:
“So are you old enough to be her father, or is she at least out of college this time?”
Raising an eyebrow, Eddie acknowledged my reference to his weakness for nubile wives, a weakness that had inspired me, some months back, when I still thought it—and everything else about Eddie’s womanizing—was hilarious, to refer to
him “affectionately” as Humbert Humbert. But Eddie’s finding a wife was serious business these days, and so neither of us was laughing.
“Okay, I’m sorry,” I lied. “What’s she like?”
Inhaling and exhaling, sipping and pacing, Eddie, as always, considered the question carefully. Hypervigilant in his efforts to capture the true essence of each new wife with precision and accuracy, and in as few words as possible, he said finally, in a tone that implied he had given the question a great deal more than ten seconds of thought:
“She’s perfect.”
“Perfect,” I echoed.
“Well,
almost
perfect,” Eddie clarified.
“
Almost
perfect,” I echoed again. I was stalling for time.
Almost perfect
was not in the notebook.
“Six inches shy of perfect, to be exact. You see,” he said by way of explanation, “she’s only five foot one.”
The first serious wife contender to come along while I lived with Eddie was the wife he met in early February.
It was a Friday night when he came home and announced his news, parading in front of me in his lucky suit, more than slightly drunk.
“Speak,” I slurred.
I, of course, had been sitting on the what-will-become-of-me couch all night, sipping Jack Daniel’s daintily from an oversized coffee mug.
He told me that he’d seen his wife at a cocktail party, that she was a cellist, and that she was very beautiful and very rich. In fact, she was
so
beautiful and
so
rich, he said, that he’d found out he would have to get her permission to call her.
“Permission to call her?” I slurred again.
“She’s had some unfortunate luck with men,” Eddie purred, lighting a Camel and continuing to pace back and forth in front of me. “Luck that I plan to change.”
“Good thing you were wearing your lucky suit.”
Eddie stared at me. Obviously, at a time like this—post-hunt, prepursuit—he was not in the mood for humor.
“So, what,” I said, “you’ll call her to ask her if you can call her?”
“No. My friends who had the party will call her. Then they’ll tell me if I can proceed.”
“
Permission?
How come we don’t require permission to be called?” Joan asked when I called her later that night. But before I had a chance to answer, Eddie hit my curtain a few times.
He needed the phone.
An hour or so later he poked his hand through the curtain.
Opposable thumbs up
.
Their first date would be one week thence, Eddie briefed me, the following Saturday night. All weekend long he paced back and forth across the apartment, planning and refining his strategy for the date.
I watched him from my bed through the slit between the curtain and the wall and made notes:
Subject E’s attempts to pursue “wife” have produced specific feelings of anxiety; convinced that a “perfect plan” for first formal encounter must be executed to produce desired effect in wife object
.
Subject E grappling intensely with details of said plan (i.e. activity, feeding venue, etc.), as well as with issues of
manipulation of wife object’s feelings
vis-à-vis
her perception of his plan of action
.
Subject E displaying “deep thought” behavior patterns but has not verbally communicated to on-site observer
.
Finally, on Sunday night, he filled me in on the details of his plan: because Catherine had lived her whole life in a rarefied environment and undoubtedly missed out on her childhood, he would take her to the circus and then to dinner someplace “common.”
Such plotting
Such planning.
Such psychological deconstruction and silent deliberation.
Bulls become eerily focused when they’re formulating their plan of attack
.
Eddie’s date went off without a hitch.
Catherine loved the circus, and she loved the Greek diner he carefully picked out. The following week he took her ice-skating in Central Park and to Rumpelmayer’s afterward for hot chocolate and grilled cheese sandwiches. It seemed his lost-childhood-theme-park strategy was working perfectly.
“Let’s celebrate downstairs,” he said to me when he’d returned from the date, his Hans Brinker cheeks aglow.
It was only three in the afternoon, and I had never been to Night Owls in daylight. We sat down at the bar, and before we had even taken our coats off, our drinks arrived.
I looked at Eddie. “What did you do? Call ahead?”
Eddie took a sip of his Scotch before launching into his update. “I thought you’d be interested to know that we haven’t slept together yet.”
No burying the lead this time.
I stopped in mid-sip. “But you’ve been seeing her for two weeks. Standard operating procedure for you is normally two hours.”
“I know. But this is different. It’s
spe
cial,” he said, his voice revoltingly full of reverence.
“
Spe
cial?”
“You see,” he explained, “sometimes, when a man meets someone special—a wife,” he clarified, “it’s better to wait. To take things slow.” He went on. “You don’t want to sleep with a wife on the first date.”
I nodded for a few seconds, processing. “But I thought that’s what men wanted—to sleep with a woman as soon as possible so that they could fall in love as soon as possible.”
Eddie shook his head dismissively. Clearly, I wasn’t getting it.
“So you didn’t sleep with Rebecca on the first date?” I asked.
He looked past me to the windows that faced the street. “No,” he said. “Though she would have.”
I looked out at the street too. The air was thick and gray, the way it gets before it snows. “I slept with Ray on the first date,” I said, almost to myself. “Maybe that’s why it didn’t work.”
Eddie turned and looked me in the eyes. “No, Jane. It didn’t work because Ray’s an idiot.”
I stared at him. In all the months I’d lived with him he’d never offered an opinion of Ray. His words surprised me. “You think?”
“He doesn’t know what he wants yet. He’s too young.”
Too young.
Ray was thirty. And Eddie was thirty-five. That didn’t seem
too young to me to know whether or not you love someone, and what to do about it if you did.