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Authors: Louis Begley

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BOOK: Memories of a Marriage
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She began to cry, for the first time since our first meetings.
We were sitting on a park bench. I put my arm around her shoulder and patted her, unable to find words of comfort.

That’s all right, she said, thank you. Or no, it’s not all right. You know how they fuck you up, your mom and dad, they don’t mean to, but they do? Of course, you do. They sure fucked me up, or if it wasn’t them it was the men who had used me, Thomas included, or all those goddamn De Bourghs and Goddards who had handed down the wrong genes. I have not had the life I had expected. I’m sure I’ve told you that ten times already, but saying it again doesn’t make it less true. Or the life I deserved. Anyway, even Thomas could tell I was sick. He asked what Dr. Reiner advised me to do. I lied and said he was sending me back to McLean. I’d never told him about having already been in that place, after I returned from Geneva, so this came as a jolt. He knew I was damaged goods, but now he really knew he’d married a crazy woman. Probably he was scared, and he offered to go to see Dr. Reiner and talk about what should be done. I said he didn’t need to bother. There was nothing Dr. Reiner could do for me beyond taking my money and writing prescriptions. I knew better than anyone else what I needed: it was to change the way I lived. Otherwise I’d break. He could count on it. They’d lock me up for good.

That night, when we were in bed, and I was going to get up and put in the diaphragm, he said, Don’t. Let’s make a child. That’s the change in your life you need. You’ll see. You’ll be happy and you’ll be well. All the while he was touching me just the way I had told him he should, and as I came I had a vision of what a baby of my own would be like, how I would love it,
how I would do everything to make sure everything was right for him, a vision that was so strong that I said, Yes, do it, and drew him inside me. We fucked all night. I don’t know how many times he came. The crazy thing is that I didn’t get pregnant right away. I had my period, and then another and yet another. Finally I missed a period and had the test. The child was there. And during all that time, I talked to Dr. Reiner about it and what it would be like to have the baby and bring it up and how everything would turn out well, and he let me babble on like that and never said the one and only sensible thing, which was that a child has never fixed a bad marriage or cured someone like me. Of course, Thomas and I should have known that ourselves or should have gotten different and better advice. So Jamie was born, and he was the most beautiful child, the most perfect beautiful little man anyone had ever seen, and he was a very good boy too. Then I had two miscarriages, one after another. Why were we trying to have another child? We’d gotten used to doing it without a diaphragm. He liked it, and I did too. Then the depression settled down on me heavier than ever. Do you understand now? Do you see how idiotic it is to talk of me working? I was in bad shape when we moved to New York. The apartment was freshly wallpapered, the curtains were new, but I was in tatters. That’s how you saw me on your first visit.

I said that if that had been the case she had put on a very good show.

The memory of your complaining about the apartment being north of Seventy-Second Street and on the wrong side of the avenue and so forth, I told her, had made me wonder
for a moment whether you’d just stepped out of a Peter Arno cartoon, but otherwise? You and Thomas had seemed the epitome of a young Wall Street investment banker and his
Mayflower-
or
Arabella
-descendant wife, a picture only enhanced when the nurse brought in Jamie, and he was scurrying around the living room in his Carter’s pajamas with feet.

I’m glad you thought so, she replied scowling. For your information, my Warren cousins came on the
Mayflower
and my Dudley cousins on the
Arabella
. The De Bourghs and the Goddards were latecomers. Whatever kind of impression we may have made on you, life was pure hell, and it got worse. I did have a new doctor who was really quite helpful, at least in the beginning, and the nurse, the one who looked like Aunt Jemima, was very good, the best we ever had. But she quit; she couldn’t stand hearing Thomas and me fight. I was lonely, I was wretched, and when I finally met people I liked through Penny Stone, who’d come back from Paris and was living in New York—you probably remember her, she was a photo model then—Thomas was odious about them. There were some others, the old crowd. A faggot poet I’d known in Paris who double-crossed me later, a painter. People who had talent and were beginning to be recognized and anyway knew how to be amusing. Thomas put the kibosh on it. It was just the way he had been with Jerzy! He said they were louche; the fact is that he felt threatened by them. He wanted to be with society people, you know, friends of my parents, distant cousins, and so on, or with his colleagues and clients. That all changed, of course, when he became a big deal and started
to move in intellectual circles with all the people who he was goddamn sure mattered. But that was later, after we’d split up, once he’d teamed up with that dreadful Jane Morgan!

There was no way she could realize it, but she’d just given me the opening I needed.

You mean after you got him to agree to a divorce, I asked.

He was a cheat, she answered, a very clever, slippery cheat. You can’t imagine how tired it made me. I should have asked for a divorce a hundred times. Each time I said, I know what you’re doing, he’d put on this dumb blank expression or fly into a rage. He’d say, If I have done something wrong and you can prove it, tell me about it, and I’ll tell you whether it’s true or not, I’ll give you all the explanations you want, I’ll admit what’s true, but don’t you dare accuse me of things you can’t prove. I was afraid of him, afraid that he’d kill me. Of course, I couldn’t prove any of it, he was far too sneaky and careful, but that didn’t matter to me. I just knew. My intuition has never been wrong. One way I could tell was that he wanted new kinds of sex. He’d try them on me, usually when I was almost asleep. Somebody was showing him things I swear he hadn’t known, and he missed them when he was with me. If I said, Why are you doing this, it’s not what married couples do, not unless normal sex no longer works for them, he had the effrontery to claim he was only doing what he had noticed really excited me. Finally I realized what was going on: it wasn’t sluts he paid or the pornography he was watching on Eighth Avenue. I knew all about that; he’d made me sit through
Deep Throat
and
Behind the Green Door
. It was Jane Morgan. Why else were we with the two of them all
the time, her and that awful husband Horace she threw over as soon as she knew she’d harpooned Thomas? There was no other reason. Other lawyers at that firm and other law firms worked for Thomas, and he wasn’t always asking them and their wives to dinner with him and me at this or that restaurant. He just had to be with her. It didn’t matter whether I or that man were there too. I even caught them playing footsie under the table. I talked to my doctor about it, and he said, If that is so, you should consider bringing that relationship into the open and making everybody assume their responsibilities. I did just that. I called Horace at his office and said, There is this one little thing you should know: your great friend and client, Mr. Thomas Snow, is fucking your wife. Perhaps you need to talk to her about it. He hung up on me without saying a word, and when I called back his secretary said he was in a meeting and couldn’t be disturbed. No wonder. See no evil, hear no evil: he didn’t want to know anything that would complicate his relations with his most important client, perhaps even get him fired. So the next day in the morning, just as Thomas was setting out for the office, I told him what I had done, and I could tell that I had really gotten to him, right where it hurt. He turned white and left the apartment without one word. I supposed he’d come home in the evening and get violent. He’d hit me earlier that month over nothing. He’d taken a table at the Metropolitan Museum dinner where Al Gordon was being honored, he’d invited some of his usual business friends, including of course the loathsome Jane and her husband, I’d said I’d go, and then something happened to me. I was all dressed up,
but I couldn’t go, I couldn’t leave the house; I sat down on the floor and screamed. All right, he’d have to rearrange the seating at his table, but otherwise it wasn’t a big deal. He said, Stop this noise or I’ll call your doctor. I didn’t stop, I didn’t even want to. All right, he told me. I’m making that call. I got there before he did. It was a telephone connected to the jack by a very long wire, so we could move it around the living room. I threw it at him hard, aiming at his chest. But it was a bad throw; it hit him in the face. He checked whether his nose was bleeding—of course it wasn’t, it had just cut his lip—and then slapped me, really hard; it left a red mark on my cheek. So you can see, I had reason to be scared.

But he came back to the apartment much earlier, in the midafternoon. I was in the library. He didn’t say a word. I didn’t either. In a few minutes I saw him with a suitcase in hand. He must have gone to the closet where we kept them. This time I followed him as he carried it into the bedroom, and he threw in his toilet kit, photos of Jamie from the top of his dresser, and a suit. Perhaps some shirts and stuff like that. All in perfect silence while I watched. As soon as he’d finished he went into Jamie’s room. Again, I followed. Jamie was just finishing his homework, and Hugh Cowles, the St. Bernard’s master who worked with him in the afternoons, was leaving. Thomas said goodbye to Hugh in his normal voice. Those were the first words I’d heard him speak since he came home. Then the moment Hugh was out the door, that monster told Jamie he wasn’t going to live with us at the apartment anymore, but they would see each other a lot, and some other nonsense of that sort, and anyway once Jamie got to Exeter
in the fall it would be a whole other ball game. Jamie wasn’t to worry. How did the monster know I’d let him near the kid? As you can imagine, Jamie cried, and when Thomas tried to shush him he said—I’ll never forget Jamie’s saying that, he was such a good kid at the time—I love you, Daddy, I so wish you would stay with Mommy and me!

I can’t remember what kind of answer Thomas gave. He picked up his suitcase and walked out without one word for me. I didn’t even know where he was going. Later his secretary called to say that he could be reached at the Plaza, but only—I still remember the thrill in her voice when she said it, that woman hated me so—in case of a real emergency. Can you believe it? That bastard never came back to the apartment, didn’t even clear out his stuff. Maybe a month later, when his secretary called to give me his address and telephone number at an apartment he’d gotten on Seventy-Third Street, I said I would have all of it put in boxes and sent to him if he paid the mover. She said she’d check and get back to me. She did, the next day. Mr. Snow suggested that I have the rear-elevator man get rid of whatever I didn’t want for my personal use.

We had been talking over tea at her apartment, and I found that being there, as it were, on the scene helped me visualize the events she had described. As one might expect, she was upset, and so was I, and I broke my self-imposed rule and asked her whether we could have a drink of something stronger than tea.

You know where to find the liquor, she told me.

I got us our usual whiskeys, and we drank them in companionable
silence, which I broke to ask another question, this one I thought certain to provoke her.

Did he slap as hard as Hubert?

She surprised me by laughing. No, Thomas was always a wimp and a sissy.

I took a moment to absorb that and told her that in two days I would move to Sharon for the rest of the summer.

Well, I guess you’ve gotten what you wanted, she replied, so now you don’t need to hang around. That seems to be the pattern in my life. Men help themselves to whatever I have and leave slamming the door behind them. Only you’d never do anything so unequivocal; you’ll tiptoe out and shut the door ever so gently.

I was about to protest, but she held up her hand and added, Don’t worry, I’m not mad at you, I’m leaving for Little Compton tomorrow. Peter and Mary Chaplin are giving a housewarming. They’ve sold the big house and are moving into a very nice cottage near the club. But if I get bored, or there is too much fog over the water, I may just come to see you in Connecticut. Let’s make sure I have the right telephone number.

IX

A
S
I
HAVE
mentioned before, the weekend I had told Lucy I’d be spending with my aged cousin Hetty in Philadelphia I had spent in fact in Water Mill, with Jane Morgan and Ned Morris, her new husband. I took the train to Southampton on Saturday morning, Jane picked me up at the station, and we got to her house in time for a late lunch. It was my first visit to the house, although Thomas had talked about it often. All I knew about the new husband was that Thomas had brought him into his firm as a partner a few years before he retired and cashed out. The house turned out to be a rambling white clapboard affair on Flying Point Road set in an overgrown garden that ended at a salt marsh. Beyond it lay the ocean. Poor Thomas loved this place, Jane said, with all its imperfections. All the funny-shaped rooms one can’t possibly use, the four porches, the way everything new you bring into it is instantly absorbed. Armchairs and sofas that you’ve just had reupholstered, curtains
that were sewn and hung last week look as though they had been here since the beginning of time. He bought it and had it renovated before we decided to get married. He used to say it was the house he’d always wanted, and it’s impossible not to feel his presence here. Knowing this you’ll probably ask yourself why Ned and I decided to live here. I guess the answer is that we like it too, a lot. Jamie didn’t want it—he doesn’t plan to spend time on the East Coast—and neither he nor I wanted to put it on the market, so Ned bought it from the estate. Jamie’s been out here since and says he feels good about it. I can tell what you’re thinking: the apartment in New York. Thomas left it to me and I saw no need to move.

BOOK: Memories of a Marriage
6.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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