Read Gay Place Online

Authors: Billy Lee Brammer

Gay Place (11 page)

“That’s
true
,” Giffen said. “There’s that quality …”

Earle Fielding arrived, flanked by two bellboys carrying fresh ice and soda. Earle’s appearance seemed to give the party renewed vitality; people attempted to get hold of themselves, straightening mouths, tightening jaws, laughing a little. Earle moved across the room and handed over the car keys to Rinemiller.

“We got it all figured, Earle,” Giffen said. “We gonna run you and Alfred for Governor and Lieutenant Governor next year.”

“And a black man for Attorney General,” Huggins said.

Earle smiled. Someone handed him a drink. He hoisted it as in a toast. “Throw the goddam rascals out!” he said.

“Yeah!”

“Yah!”

Rinemiller excused himself and went into the bathroom. He stood over the toilet bowl and blotted at the perspiration that had flashed across his forehead. He thought about money, standing there weaving over the toilet bowl, wishing he had only half — a quarter even — of Earle’s. He decided, standing there, realizing that he was somehow, incredibly, not going to be sick, the future almost automatically suffused with limitless opportunity, that he really should work on Earle Fielding about their running together. If not next year, some year soon. Earle was a good and valuable friend and one hell of a fine politician. No one better. Too bad about Earle and Ouida, he thought.

He turned and lurched out and lay down for a few minutes in one of the vacant bedrooms, holding his head. Presently, he turned over and reached for the telephone. He dialed the number, and on the third or fourth ring Ouida’s voice came on.

The child, he thought. Oh Jesus I hope I didn’t wake that boy. Little Ole Earlie.

“Ouida,” he began, “I hope to Jesus …”

“What …?”

“Ouida?”

“Yes.”

“How are you, honey?”

“Fine … Who …”

“You think I could come over see you? I need to talk.”

“Who … Alfred? Is that you, Alfred?”

“This Alfred, honey. You think I might cover over an’ visit?”

“The two of you? You and Earle? You want to spend the night here?”

“Yes … I mean no. You and mean …
Me
… Is what I me. Sit talk few minutes. You’n me. Always felt … Had a special feeling … That time we kissed … Remember? That time? Had feelin’ ’bout … Didn’t wake the boy, did I?”

“Alfred … I’m already in bed. I’m sorry. Really. Perhaps we can talk this weekend at the ranch. Would you like that? You’ll come out, won’t you?”

“Yeah, yeah,” Rinemiller said. “Ranch.” He repeated it again —
“ranch”
— as if it were an insight into something. It was not until he rang off that he remembered everyone was coming to the ranch for the weekend. It wasn’t a country house rendezvous with Ouida after all.

Still … he was able to tell himself there was some promise in what she’d said. She hadn’t hung up on him, hadn’t said
No, Alfred, hell no and go way and quit buggin’ me.
She was nice enough on the phone. He tried to remember what it was like when he had kissed her in the hotel room two years before, his hands touching her dressfront and Ouida gasping every time he pulled her hips against his. He lay back in the empty bed now, wondering about the Fieldings. There was record music coming from the front rooms. Fats Domino sang it to him …

Ah’m gonna be uh wheel someday

Ah’m gonna be some bah-dy

Ah’m gonna be uh real gone cat

’N then Ah woan wahn yew …

Willie’s phonograph droned on in the second story loft. Willie sipped wine from a peanut-butter glass and watched the girl, who sat cross-legged, like a small boy, on one of the work tables. She was slim and small-boned, neck and arms like flower stems; yet oddly voluptuous, full-breasted and going heavy in the hips, like a dancer who had never quite taken her work seriously. Her clothes were a puzzle too; she exuded a kind of chic provincialism, and he considered the conflicting images: Cathryn visiting smart little dress shops, looking for something a bit different; Cathryn bending down on her knees in a glum college dormitory, tracing off a fifty-cent dress pattern. He couldn’t determine which it was with her, and now that he’d asked, he was afraid he might have said the wrong thing.

“I had no business,” he said, hesitating, searching for the right words.

“Why not?” she said. “I
wish
I were a debutante. The truth is, my father’s a traffic cop. He has to renew a note every year at the bank to send me spending money.”

“Still,” Willie said. “I had no business making smart cracks.”

He had taken a good look at her and suggested that she was either very rich or very poor — that she was definitely not middle class.

“I was thinking tonight how long it’s been since I carried on a normal conversation with anyone,” Willie said. “Without talking in the secret code. You know what I mean? I can’t remember the last time I carried on a really
dull
conversation — I mean commonplace stuff. The weather, neighbors, family.
Realism.
Paddy Chayefsky. You know?”

She nodded her head. Her sweet laughter filled the big room.

“Anyhow,” he said, “I’m glad you’re not a rich girl.”


I’m
not glad about it,” Cathryn said. “Why should it please you?”

“It’s easier,” Willie said. “It’s easier on my tender jazz-age psyche: I get a terrible case of the nostalgia in the evenings. I have this thing about girls I like. I’ve got to know all about them — everything. I’ll want to see your yearbook pictures and old love letters and photographs when you were coming to puberty and who it was first kissed you. And whether you were in the senior play. All that stuff. I always want to live it over again with the girl and feel poignant because I wasn’t there. Wasn’t there to see how pretty you were when you were thirteen, for example.”

“I was terrible at thirteen,” Cathryn said.

“It’ll be easier with you,” Willie said. “Not as much fun; I mean not as poignant — no real pathos — but I won’t be agonized about it. With rich girls it’s different. Their young girlhood is about as remote to my experience as playing stickball on the streets of New York. My father was a salesman for the National Biscuit Company. Growing up was bloody dull. So I sit around wishing I had been sent off to dancing school when I was twelve; sorry because my family never vacationed in the same resort town year after year — you know? The way it is in resort towns when you see the same good families reappearing every season? I hitched East on vacation few years ago, and it had a terrible depressing effect on me. Just looking at all those damn prep schools stuck away in the hills. I visited Cambridge and lay alongside the river and looked at those crazy spires at Harvard. I was melancholy for a week. Damn near ruined me …” He looked at the girl and grinned. “See? I make one hell of a revolutionary.”

Cathryn slipped off her sandals and pulled her bare feet up on the worktable. “Fascinating,” she said. “I never had this problem.”

“It’s this new social mobility,” Willie said. “Damned lousy democratic way of life. And it’s worse down here where there aren’t many really old and good families left. What we’ve got is new money; status hasn’t solidified. You like that? You can move up — or at least drift in and out. It’s bad enough having to come to terms with the money itself … Very conspicuous consumption … You become acquisitive; you want things. But even then it’s not enough. You end up wanting the impossible things — like a new childhood.”

“All I want,” the girl said, “is a red M.G.”

“No unhappy thoughts about your misspent youth?”

“In my youth I wanted a red M.G.”

“You’ll get it,” Willie said. “You’re bound to.”


I’ll
end up a schoolteacher driving a five-year-old business coupe!”

“Maybe it’s because of my age,” Willie said.

“What is?”

“All this wishing I’d gone to summer camp and attended Choate School and Harvard and married a girl from one of those junior colleges you never heard of. Maybe it’s because I’m getting old. Because I’m thirty.

“You don’t look thirty.”

“Only as young as you feel,” Willie said. “I feel thirty. And shallow and superficial and defeated. Compromised. No more revolutions. I missed all that, too. I need an enthusiasm. I feel about ready to sell out. Except nobody would buy me off …”

“Good heavens!”

“I don’t ordinarily groan this way,” Willie said.

“Reading that paper of yours I thought you were irrevocably committed to the class war,” the girl said.

“I want a red M.G.,” Willie said.

Roy Sherwood lay across the bed, propped on his elbows, smoking a cigarette. Through the open window, from a great distance, he could hear the college towers clanging the half-hour. Only he hadn’t any notion what hour. One or two or three in the morning — it was all fuzzy in his head — and it was not that he wished so much for sleep now as simple, primitive release. Escape of any sort. Willie was right, he decided. My life, my wonderful, uneventful, irresponsible well-ordered life, is suddenly become complicated. He looked out through the window, marveling over the moonlight that seemed more spectacular than a noonday sun. I only want, he said to himself, to be left alone. Damn their souls — all of them — Ouida, Earle, Ellen, old Fenstemaker, Willie, even. Were they all out there, lurking in the shadows, ready to sandbag him with ambitions? He sniffed the gardenia bush through the window and rolled over on his back. He wondered if Earle Fielding really was outside, waiting for his next move, looking for the lights to dim.

Ouida came down the hall and sat on the bed. She smoked his cigarette.

“I hope that wasn’t Earle who called,” Roy said.

“No,” Ouida said. “It was Alfred. I can’t imagine why, either. Have I ever given Alfred any reason to think …?”

“Nobody gives Rinemiller any reason to think,” Roy said. “He does it all by himself. What’d he want at this hour?”

“To come out here. To see me. Just the two of us. He wanted to talk. Just the two of us … He kept saying that … I can’t imagine …”

“Keep away from him,” Roy said. “He’s up to no good.”

“Oh?” She lay alongside him and kissed his face. “What are you up to?”

“Good,” Roy said. “Good works. I’m the world’s greatest lawyer, politician and Zen archer, and I’m up to true and good and beautiful works.”

They lay on the bed in the back room with only light showing from the kitchen and dining area. There was a faucet dripping somewhere, and occasionally the Fielding boy loosed a sad complaint in his sleep. They traded the cigarette back and forth and Roy fretted with the radio. In a few minutes, he thought, he either would or wouldn’t make love to Ouida, and however it went, whatever success they might have, there was no release in sight. Life had become intolerably complicated in a few short weeks, and he wondered if this was what he had been unconsciously working toward all along. Avoiding any positive steps, one automatically narrowed alternatives. Resisting commitment of any kind, one was exposed to pitchmen of every sort. A pox on the irresolute! He’d get Willie to write it up, newsmagazine style: As it must to all men, the awful weight of responsibility came to State Rep. Roy Sherwood one day last week …

He wondered how long it would be before his father or uncle or older brother called, wanting to know what in hell all this talk was about his being censured. Who’s this married woman youah carryin’ on wif, boy? You can’t behave, we send Cousin Sammie up theah take you place and brang you back fah to practice the law. Lahk you should be, anyhow.

At breakfast that morning Fenstemaker had thought it a great joke. Roy considered Fenstemaker a moment, deciding he was either a dirty old man or the world’s second greatest lawyer, politician and Zen archer. The Governor had tugged on his big nose, sitting there at breakfast in the Mansion, and said, “You good boy, Roy, but that ain’t good nuff. Up in Washington right now, in the Statler, they already made the beds and swept the rooms — and ev’body’s out runnin’ round makin’ history. Lots of history been made on top of a woman, but you ain’t gonna make it that way. Not just yet, anyhow …”

Ouida sat up and snuffed out the cigarette. “I’m going to undress,” she said.

“Wish you wouldn’t,” he said.

“Why?”

“You’ll make things awfully difficult.”

“You’re a dud, you know that?” she said. “I thought we were all set to change the rules.”

“It’s just … Well, Earle’s in town. Rinemiller’s calling you on the phone. Your boy down the hall here, he’s whooping in his sleep. It’s an unwholesome environment …”

She held on to his hand and he began to speak again: “… I’m basically a poet, fundamentally a poet … Shy, sensitive, communicating on several levels of consciousness.
Ambivalent
is what I am …”

“All right,” Ouida said, smiling. “I’ll wake the sitter. We’ll go somewhere else. Where shall we go?”

“I’ll think about it,” he said. He lay there thinking.

“What about your house?”

“My cat’s there,” Roy said. “Name of Sam Luchow. A shy, sensitive basically ambivalent cat. I wouldn’t want to give Sam Luchow the trauma. He’s anxious enough as it is …”

Theories spun round in his head, schoolboyish and implausibly proper, vaguely Freudian. What he wanted, actually, was
not
to have Ouida. Would he have preferred to wander on out the front door and spend the next year rooting in his own bedcovers, pawing the ground, moaning about his unrequited love? It could not be entirely that. He did not want to get himself hopelessly involved with a girl he cared far too much about. Carnality had been such a tyrannizing factor between them from the beginning that he felt some effort ought to be made to establish another set of values before embarking on the obvious.

But then she pulled open her dressfront and lay against him, and his last uneasy conviction flailed the air and died. Her skin smelled wonderfully good, and they had some lighthearted beginnings.

Later, he pulled himself from bed and, partly dressed, bent down to kiss her fluttering heart. But she would not let him leave, coming awake in his arms and beginning to cry, and it was dawn before he got out of the house. He paced off the distance to the car and was just stepping inside when Earle Fielding grabbed him, whirled him around, and clipped him lightly on the chin.

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