The Sunlight Dialogues (64 page)

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Authors: John Gardner

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He found himself worrying as badly as he’d worried all that time in the jail. It was dangerous for him. The doctor had said so. For his ticker’s sake if for no other reason, he had to get himself out of this state. He took a drink from the pop bottle, then closed his eyes and lay with his arms hanging over the sides of the hammock as before. But comfortable as the hammock was, good as it was to be drinking Orange Crush again in his own back yard, he could not drive away his heavy dread. He drew the pocket book of poetry from his inside suit pocket and opened it where it opened easiest, from many past readings. The poem began to affect him even before he began to read.

O friend, my bosom said,

Through thee alone the sky is arched.

Through thee the rose is red;

All things through thee take nobler form,

And look beyond the earth,

The mill-round of our fate appears

A sun-path in thy worth.

Me too thy nobleness has taught

To master my despair;

The fountains of my hidden life

Are through thy friendship fair.

Walter Benson read it again and again, and gradually the world around him was transmuted. All that had been, a moment ago, grim and dangerous and too heavy to bear seemed now mere passing illusion, and what was real was, he thought, the arched sky and the rose and the sun-path, whatever that might be. Tears brimmed up in his eyes.

Something stirred, nearby. He hid the book quickly and glanced around. It was only the Springers’ dog, so he drew out the book again, cautiously, and reread the poem twice, until he’d gotten back his former emotion. His eyes filled once again with tears, and it grieved him to remember what harsh thoughts he had thought about the people he’d passed on his long walk home. He, Walter Benson, was as much a sinner as any of them, he knew. He’d been looking merely at the outer husks, forgetting the inner fountains, as one of his poems said. He read one more time the poem about friendship and suddenly, ardently, Benson wished he had a friend so he could mail the poem to him.

He closed his eyes and gave out a tiny whimper, profoundly at peace with the world, if only for the moment, and two minutes later the pop bottle dropped almost soundlessly from his fingers onto the lawn.

It was dark when Benson awakened. At first he couldn’t tell what it was that had made him wake up. The cold, maybe. Then he saw the car in the driveway. It took him a moment to recognize it. It was the roomer’s car. He remembered the name now: Ollie Nuper. Marguerite and Mr. Nuper were just in the process of opening the door on the back porch—he young and wild-haired and gangly, she old and crippled and fat—and Mr. Nuper had his arm around her, helping her through the door. They turned the back-porch light on. Walter Benson half sat up in the hammock and was just about to shout his greeting when an incredible thing happened. They kissed. He could not believe his eyes, but there was no mistake: they kissed each other as if with youthful passion, she throwing her fat legs apart, he pressing hard against her. Benson felt himself going pale, his hands as cold as ice.
I’ll kill them!
he thought. They parted then, and Marguerite laughed. Benson was sick with anguish. “It’s an outrage!” he whispered to himself. He meant to leap from the hammock and run up to them, but he continued to sit in complete silence, holding his breath, watching. The back door closed and the kitchen light went on. A moment later, the porch light went off. He whimpered, “Has she no
shame?”
Then he thought, “I dreamed it! It’s nothing but a dream! I was asleep!” It came to him that he’d said that before. And yet perhaps it really had been a dream. There was no other explanation.

He got out of the hammock without a sound and began to move slowly, furtively, toward the house.

2

It was a night Walter Benson would never forget. Though a professional thief, he was, in point of fact, a perfect innocent, a babe in the woods. He had heard there were people like Ollie Nuper in the world (had heard once of a rich doctor somewhere in Florida who had a huge bedroom done all in red, with paintings of naked people on the walls, and mirrors all around the ceiling) but he had not actually believed it. Who would?

When he reached the back porch the door was locked and the kitchen light was off. They’d gone on into the livingroom. Without a sound, and having not the slightest idea what he really meant to do, Benson opened his jackknife and flipped the doorlatch. He went in, closed the door softly behind him, put the knife away, and stood listening. Mr. Nuper and Marguerite were talking and giggling. They’d been drinking.

“You’re insatiable,” Marguerite was saying. “I never
knew
such a man!”

Mr. Nuper mumbled something, maybe kissing her or burying his face in her bosom.

Benson curled his lips, but whether with rage or disgust or grief he could not have said. The door to the livingroom was closed. It had no latch, though; he could press it open half an inch and peek in. She was letting Mr. Nuper undress her. She held her fat arms out to the side and had her head tipped up, and Mr. Nuper danced around her like a drunken tailor, unhooking, unbuttoning, unzipping, giving kisses and pats to her bulges as he danced. He was not at all handsome, not at all what one supposes such people ought to be. He had a nose like a sheep’s, with hardly any space from the flesh between his nostrils to the pink of his upper lip. His ears stuck out, his limpid brown eyes were close together, his teeth were full of silver. He was short. His arms and legs were thin and his head was the size of a ten dollar jack-o’-lantern. Benson allowed the door to come shut and leaned against the wall. He ought to have acted immediately. It was too late now, he thought.

When he heard them going upstairs he roused himself and tiptoed into the livingroom where their clothes lay on the rug. He stood at the foot of the stairs rubbing his face with both hands, trying to get his thoughts straightened out, growing more befuddled every minute until finally it seemed to him that he had driven her to it, or worse, that she had endured him all these years only because she’d known nothing any better; he was, beyond any shadow of a doubt, a miserable person, a freak who ought to have been mercifully killed at birth.

They were having a wonderful time up there, making not only the bedsprings but the whole house, as it seemed to Benson, squeak and creak and sway. He went cautiously up the steps and bent his ear toward the door.

“Tell me what you’re doing to me,” Marguerite said.

Benson clapped his hands over his ears and hissed with rage. They didn’t hear him.

It came to him suddenly, with perfect clarity, as though someone right there in the hallway with him had whispered it into his good ear, that even if he himself was partly responsible, it was nevertheless a terrible thing they were doing to him. A terrible crime! He had feelings, didn’t he? And there was his health! They ought to have thought about that! He would kill them! It was what anyone would do! He closed his hand around the jackknife in his pocket. The blade would be too short. But he’d find something. Yes! It was the natural thing! The right thing! He would tear out a post from the banister and go in there and stove their heads in!

But immediately he thought of a great many complications. Nuper was younger and probably stronger than he was, and perhaps, if the whole truth were known, Marguerite was just pretending to enjoy it. Some kind of blackmail, say. Also, his picture would be in the paper if he murdered them, and someone would see it and remember Walter Boyle. Also, it was really his own fault in the first place. His own stupid fault—yes! Tears suddenly welled up into his eyes. Here he was, fifty-six years old, and his whole life was a waste: long, wasted nights sleeping in the Rambler in some unheard-of little town, wasted weeks sleeping in a jail, poring over some newspaper he didn’t care about one bit, and he was getting on in years now—for what? all for what?—and what would they do with no social security coming in? He thought of his father, wasting away on some desert island or some flophouse in Chicago or wherever it was he’d gone when he disappeared, and his poor mother wasting away in the poor folks’ home, and his poor sister wasting away with that brute of a husband the bus driver, who would beat her every Saturday night and walk out on her and the four little children and come back again Tuesday morning, sure as doom. He sat down on the top step to cry but then thought better of it: there was not a sound coming from the bedroom now. The small, familiar pain came over his ticker.

The bed creaked. Somebody was sitting up.

Mr. Nuper said as if sadly, “I can’t stay any longer, love. Pamphlets to deliver.”

“Must you?” she asked. A groan of satisfaction.

A sound of kissing. “Forgive me, dearest.”

Giggles.

The sense of what they were saying broke into Benson’s mind and his eyes widened with alarm. He got downstairs and out of sight just in the nick of time, before Mr. Nuper came padding barenaked out to the hall and down the stairs behind him. Benson fled to the kitchen and stood there clenching and unclenching his fists, wondering why the devil he’d run away. It was his house, wasn’t it? It was his wife, too, in fact. He heard Mr. Nuper dressing in the livingroom, whistling to himself under his breath and then having another drink. Again just in the nick of time Walter Benson got out the back door and down on the lawn, out of sight, before Mr. Nuper came into the kitchen. As he crouched at the foot of the steps, waiting, Benson’s hand accidentally fell upon a dew-wet two-by-four he’d forgotten to put away a month or two ago when he was fixing the back-porch steps. His heart raced. He lifted it up—it swung easily, a little like a baseball bat—and he ducked behind the spirea to wait for Mr. Nuper. When the man reached the bottom step Benson would leap out behind him and
blam!
He clenched his teeth and held his breath, smiling.

At last the back door opened. Peeking up through the leaves, Benson could see him coming toward the steps with a box on his shoulder—no doubt the pamphlets he’d mentioned to Marguerite. Benson kept absolutely still, almost painfully alert. He could smell the rich earth under his shoes, the spirea like violent perfume, and he could hear sounds as much as a mile away—a garbage-can lid grating down onto the can, a motorcycle out on the highway, a man’s voice calling a dog. Louder than thunder, it seemed to him, was the soft footfall of Ollie Nuper coming down the steps, momentarily passing out of sight behind the spirea. Walter Benson knew now that he was going to do it, he actually was, and he felt a ghastly joy. When Nuper reached the bottom step, Benson waited only a fraction of a second more, then leaped out behind him, bringing down the club with all his might. But at the last quarter-second he pulled back and swerved the club to one side so that it missed, and Benson, in confusion, ducked back into hiding. Nuper had shifted the box to his head; the blow would have had no effect. Benson panted. He wanted to cry and pound on the earth.

Nuper, moving on, oblivious to it all, put the box in the back seat of his car, reaching it in through the open left-rear window. Then, instead of getting in at once, he walked around behind the garage. Benson could hear him urinating against the garage wall. The sound went on and on. Suddenly, on a lunatic impulse, Benson dropped the two-by-four, darted over to the car, and, for fear the door might give him away, squeezed in through the window and huddled, panting hard, behind the driver’s seat. Only then, with his knees pushing into his chest, did he realize his predicament. He had nothing to fight with, and Nuper would certainly discover him here the moment he reached in for the box. He raised up his head, like a madman newly come to his senses, and he meant to climb out the same way he’d come in; but Nuper was coming now. Benson ducked down again so quickly that he scratched his ear on a spring coming out through the back of the driver’s seat. Nuper opened the door, making the light go on, and slid in, still whistling to himself. He started up the engine.

3

In point of fact, Benson need not have worried. Ollie Nuper was exceedingly drunk, in the first place, and in the second place, the box of pamphlets was a ruse, a device for escaping Marguerite and moving on to further adventures. It was true (as Benson would later learn) that Nuper was a distributor of pamphlets, an organizer, a devout radical—a Communist, in fact—willing to lend his talents to any cause he believed to be worthy—and whatever one might finally think of him, he had his most definite, most righteous beliefs.

His chief belief was that most people are not merely foolish or short-sighted or lacking in imagination but consciously and viciously hypocritical. His father was the manager of a savings and loan association in New York, an aging junior executive who kept a house he couldn’t afford on Long Island and a cottage he shared with two other people on Lake George. He’d spent a lifetime smiling politely in the general direction of people he detested, including, some of the time, his son; and though he loved his wife he was not always strictly faithful. Both he and his wife had thought at first that they were very lucky to get a bookish, nervously intelligent son: Ollie was going to go far, his father said. Later, though, the father grew less sure of this. All through school and even through his undergraduate years at the University of Connecticut, Ollie Nuper had no friends. It was the usual story. He’d learned to read before he went into grade school, but he hadn’t learned to play. When other first-graders stood in the playground watching the older children play kickball and dodgeball and steal-the-sticks, learning the mystical secret of play by watching other people do it, Ollie Nuper, full of six-year-old righteousness which both his parents and his teachers admired, retreated to books. When he did play, he cheated or got into fights which he always lost. He was not completely antisocial, however. He discovered very quickly that he could gain at least a kind of admiration by knowing things before other people did, and he had a not too-surprising knack for guessing what the people around him were about to want to know. In high school he became an authority on sex, a distributor of obscene slides, a notorious drinker, a smoker of marijuana. Despite all this, his marks were excellent. In college he suddenly matured. He became a coffee-house poet, an unwed father, so to speak, and a follower of Trotsky. He tried the twelve-string guitar, for a time, but people told him he had no ear. (This enraged him. Not so much the fact that people said it to him, though that hurt, of course, as the fact that he really did have no ear. He became, because of this, a confirmed atheist and wrote long, closely reasoned letters to famous ministers, among them Bishop Pike. None of the ministers answered him, but the letters were for a short time widely circulated at the University of Connecticut, and some were passed around even at M.I.T.) In graduate school—Brooklyn College, where he majored in philosophy—he at last came into his own. He discovered the doctrine of hypocrisy, and discovered, best of all, that if he was neurotic it was emphatically not his fault. It was not even his father’s fault, in fact. It was the fault of America, of Capitalism, of White Anglo-Saxon Protestantism. Of “the Western Crime.”

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