Authors: Irwin Shaw
As Patterson pointed out, there was nothing wrong with the little boy that a few brothers and sisters wouldn’t cure, but for some reason Lucy never conceived again, and by the time Tony was ten, the Crowns had given up hope o£ ever having any more children.
Those years Patterson was to regard as being the best of his life. The reason for that was not of course only the Crowns, or even primarily the Crowns. It was in that period that Patterson was establishing himself and prospering and feeling horizons opening out steadily ahead of him. But the background of the home of the Crowns, with its open door, its easy freedom, with the friendship of Oliver, and the shy warmth of Lucy and the devotion of the little boy, doubly valuable since he was himself childless, made a brightly colored setting to Patterson’s other successes that he could find nowhere else. And the feeling that he had toward Lucy, which at one time or another he described, but only to himself, and then only with a little laugh, as love, gave a new flicker of expectation and secret pleasure to him whenever he stood at their door and pressed the bell.
Sitting in the Buick, moving through the late Sunday traffic at a comfortable fifty miles an hour, he looked across again at Oliver. I wonder what he would say, Patterson thought wryly, if he knew what I was thinking at this moment. What a marvelous thing it is that we can’t read our friends’ minds.
“Sam …” Oliver said, without taking his eyes off the road.
“Yes?”
“Do you think you can get up to the lake again during the summer?”
“I’m going to try,” Patterson said.
“Will you do me a favor?”
“What’s that?”
“Leave Mrs. Wales home,” Oliver said.
“What in the world are you talking about …” Patterson began, with what he thought was an accurate imitation of surprise.
Oliver smiled at the wheel. “Now, Sam …” he said mildly.
Patterson laughed. “Okay,” he said. “Farewell, Mrs. Wales.”
“I don’t give a damn,” Oliver said. “But Lucy fired a shot.”
“Lucy,” Patterson said. “Oh.” He felt a warm flush of embarrassment and he knew, instantaneously, that he wasn’t going to come up to the lake again that summer, with or without Mrs. Wales.
“The wives’ benevolent association,” Oliver said, “protecting the other members.”
They drove without speaking for a few more miles. Then Oliver spoke again. “Sam, what did you think of that boy? Bunner?”
“Okay,” Patterson said. “I think he’ll be good for Tony.”
“If he lasts,” Oliver said.
“What do you mean?”
“Lucy’ll make his life hell.” Oliver chuckled. “I bet a week from now I get a letter saying he nearly let Tony drown or he taught him a dirty word and she had to fire him.” Oliver shook his head. “God, bringing up an only child is a touchy job. And a sick boy, to boot. Sometimes I look at him and a shiver goes over me when I think of the way he’s liable to turn out.”
“He’ll turn out all right,” Patterson said, defending Tony, but believing it, too. “You’re too nervous.”
Oliver only grunted an answer.
“What do you want?” Patterson demanded. “Do you want a guarantee that he’ll be elected governor of the state or win the heavyweight championship of the world? What do you want him to do?”
Oliver hunched thoughtfully over the wheel. “Well,” he said, slowing the car down a bit, “I don’t want him to do anything particularly.” Then he grinned. “I just want him to turn out lucky.”
“Don’t worry,” Patterson said. “With his mother and father, he’ll be lucky. It runs in the family.”
Oliver smiled, and Patterson was sure that there was irony and bitterness in the smile. “I’m glad you think so,” Oliver said.
Well, what do you know about that, Patterson thought, suddenly remembering the intuition he had had on the lawn several hours before, that Oliver was a disappointed man. With everything he has, he doesn’t think he’s lucky. What the hell does he expect out of this life?
5
A
FTER THE FIRST WEEK,
Lucy wrote Oliver that young Bunner was turning out very well, that he had won Tony by intelligently allowing Tony to make all the overtures in his own time. Young Bunner was very gay, she had written, and ingenious in keeping Tony from tiring himself. He had even managed to keep Tony happy on rainy days, she wrote.
At the end of the second week, Lucy was not sure what to write because Jeff had by that time told her that he was in love with her.
At first she had laughed at him, self-consciously playing the part of the amused older woman, something she had never had the occasion to do before. Then she had decided to write Oliver and ask him what to do about it, but had put it off because she was afraid that Oliver would make fun of her for taking something like that so seriously. Then almost patronizingly she had permitted Jeff to kiss her, to show him that it didn’t mean anything to either of them. After that she knew that whatever happened, she wasn’t going to write Oliver.
For three days she had avoided being left alone with Jeff and ten times during the three days she almost told him hat he had better leave, but she didn’t do that, either.
Lucy was one of those women who achieve innocence in marriage. As desirable as she was, and she never realized the full power of her beauty or the real effect she had on men, she was so clearly unapproachable that she had rarely been approached.
The only notable exception had been Sam Patterson, one night at a country-club dance, when he had been rather drunk and had found himself alone with her on the terrace and had taken her into his arms, which she had permitted, momentarily mistaking amorousness for friendliness.
“Lucy, dearest,” he had whispered, “there’s something I have to tell you that I …”
She had caught on then, from the tone of his voice, and she knew that whatever he had to tell her it would be better not to hear.
She had twisted away and laughed good-naturedly, and said, “Now, Sam, how many drinks have you had?”
He had stood there, ashamed, defiant, almost tragic. “It’s not the drink,” he said. But then he had turned away and walked swiftly back into the club, and she had thought, It’s only Sam, everybody knows about
him,
and when she had gone inside she had entertained herself by looking around the room and taking a count of the women that Sam Patterson had had affairs with, and there were three that she was sure of, two that she was almost sure of, and one that she guessed. She had never said anything to Oliver about it, because what was the use, and Oliver would be certain to be harsh about it and stop seeing Patterson, and everybody would lose by the whole thing. Patterson had never mentioned the night on the terrace again and neither had she and it had been long ago, when she and Oliver had only been married for five years, and sometimes now she had the feeling that it had never happened.
Her fidelity was not so much a matter of morality as a mixture of love, gratitude and fear of Oliver. It was her conviction that Oliver had rescued her from an uncertain and tormented youth and the memory of that escape, as she regarded it, made her reject almost automatically whatever fleeting desires she might have felt through the years for other men.
Despite his debonair manner, Jeff was inexperienced enough so that to him most women were equally approachable or unapproachable. And rather surprisingly, considering his good looks, he was completely humble, and had blurted it all out one afternoon, while they were seated on the lawn after lunch. They were alone for an hour because Tony was taking the daily nap which was a fixed part of his regime.
There was a mid-day hush over the lake and the morning’s wind had died down and even the insects seemed to have drowsed off. Lucy, in a flowered cotton dress, was seated leaning against a tree, her legs stretched out in front of her, her ankles crossed, a book, open and face-down, on her lap. Jeff was kneeling on one knee a few feet away from her, like a football-player resting during a time out. He had a piece of grass in his mouth and he kept his eyes down and from time to time plucked a clover stem and examined it and threw it away. It was cool in the shade of the tree and Lucy felt, sitting there, with her skin still remembering the soft touch of lake water from the morning’s swim, that she was at one of those perfect silent moments of her life that she would have wished to prolong unchanged indefinitely.
Jeff was wearing faded blue denim trousers and a white collarless T shirt with short sleeves. In the flickering shadow of the foliage above them, his skin looked mahogany against the white of his shirt. His arms were smooth but muscular, and when he plucked at the grass, Lucy noticed how the tendons moved delicately under the dark skin above his wrists. He was barefooted and his feet were squarish and much lighter in color than the rest of him and somehow they seemed to Lucy to be childishly vulnerable. Somewhere along the line, Lucy thought, I’ve forgotten what young men look like.
Jeff was squinting at a leaf in his hand. “All my life,” he said, “I’ve been on the hunt and I haven’t found one yet.”
“Found what yet?” Lucy asked.
“A four-leaf clover.” He tossed the leaf aside. “Do you think it’s significant?”
“Profoundly,” Lucy said.
“That’s what I think, too,” said Jeff. He sat down in a neat, economical, folding movement, holding his knees.
The narrow, flexible waists of young men, Lucy thought. She shook her head and picked up her book and stared at the page. “Everything turned out badly,” she read. “There were mosquitoes at Arles and when they got to Carcassone they discovered the water was turned off for the afternoon.”
“I want to know the conditions,” Jeff said.
“I’m reading,” said Lucy.
“Why’ve you avoided me for the last three days?” Jeff asked.
“I can’t wait to see how this book comes out,” said Lucy. “They are rich and young and beautiful and they travel all over Europe and their marriage is going on the rocks.”
“I asked you a question.”
“Have you ever been to Arles?” Lucy said.
“No,” said Jeff. “I haven’t been anywhere. Do you want to go to Arles with me?”
Lucy turned the page. “That’s why I’ve been avoiding you for three days,” she said. “If you keep saying things like that, I really think it might be better if you leave.” But even as she said it she knew she was thinking, Isn’t this pleasant, sitting here under a tree, listening to a young man talking foolishly like that,
Do you want to go to Arles with me?
“I’m going to tell you something about yourself,” Jeff said.
“I’m trying to read,” Lucy said. “Don’t be rude.”
“You are letting yourself be wiped out,” Jeff said.
“What?” Lucy put down her book, surprised.
“By your husband,” he said. He stood up and talked down at her. “He’s got you locked in, stowed down, vaulted, stifled …”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” Lucy said, all the more vehemently because from time to time she had said almost the same thing to Oliver in practically the same words. “You hardly even know him.”
“I know him, I know him,” Jeff said. “And if I didn’t know him, I’d know the type. My father has ten like him for friends and they’ve been in and out of my house since I was born. The holy, superior, soft-voiced, all-knowing, Ivy-League owners of the earth.”
“You haven’t the faintest idea what you’re talking about,” Lucy said.
“Don’t I, though?” Jeff began to stride restlessly back and forth in front of her. “I watched you all last August. I sat behind you in the movie house, I hung around the soda fountain when you came for ice cream. I pretended to be buying a magazine in the bookshop when you came into the circulating library. I rowed past here three times a day. I had my eye on you, I had my eye on you,” he chanted wildly. “Why do you think I came back here this summer?”
“Sssh,” Lucy said. “You’re making too much noise.”
“Nothing escaped me,” Jeff said melodramatically. “Nothing. Didn’t you even notice me?”
“No,” Lucy said.
“You see!” Jeff said loudly, as though he’d scored a point. “He’s put blinkers on you! Blinded you! You don’t even
see
anything except through those cold, filing-cabinet eyes.”
“Well, now,” Lucy said reasonably, hoping to calm Jeff down, “I don’t think it’s so unusual for a married woman of my age not to notice nineteen-year-old boys in drugstores.”
“Don’t call me a nineteen-year-old boy,” Jeff shouted in anguish. “And don’t call yourself a married woman of your age.”
“You
are
the most difficult boy,” Lucy said. She picked up her book again. “Now I’m going to read,” she said firmly.
“Go ahead and read.” Jeff crossed his arms and glared down at her. “I don’t care whether you hear what I have to say or not. But I’m going to say it anyhow. I watched you because I thought you were the most magnificent woman I had ever seen in my whole life …”
“After Carcassone,” Lucy read aloud, her voice clear and melodious, “they were stopped by floods and they decided that Spain would probably be boring anyway, so they turned north in the direction of …”
With a choked sound, Jeff leaned over and grabbed the book. Then he threw it, with all his strength, far out across the lawn.
“All right.” Lucy stood up. “That’s enough. It’s one thing to be an irresponsible and amusing boy. It’s quite another to be an insulting and overconfident boor … Now, please leave.”
Jeff faced her, his lips tight. “Forgive me,” he said huskily. “I’m not overconfident. I’m the least overconfident man in the world. I keep remembering what it was like to kiss you and I …”
“You must forget that completely,” said Lucy crisply. “I let you kiss me because you begged like a puppy and it was like kissing a nephew good night.” Even as she said it she was pleased with herself for the intelligent way she was handling him.
“Don’t lie,” he whispered. “Whatever else you do, don’t lie.”
“I asked you to leave,” Lucy said.
Jeff glared at her. Anybody watching us, Lucy thought, would be certain that he had just finished telling me he hated me. Suddenly he turned, and strode, bare-footed and straight-backed, over to where he had thrown the book. He picked it up and smoothed out a crumpled page and walked slowly back to her, under the tree.