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Authors: David Leavitt

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BOOK: The Marble Quilt
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And of course, when the coalition from the North American Man/Boy Love Association marched by, all those clerkish men in suits and ties, what did his friends think? They never said a word. Instead they kept their eyes averted, until the NAMBLA guys had filed past, and there were safe, funny drag queens again.

Our house on Wool Street could not have been more unassuming. Like a child's drawing of a house, Tom used to say. It was situated as close to nowhere as it is probably possible to get, on a neutral hill near a characterless intersection somewhere in the midst of that vast anonymity of streets no tourist ever drives, and that San Franciscans call the Mission.

I worked as an editor for a leftist magazine that was published by a foundation: a slick magazine to which rich people subscribed out of guilt, but did not read. Tom ran a catering business, and was devoted to the domestic. He could spend weeks searching for just the right toilet brush to match the bathroom fixtures. When I finished showering in the mornings, he'd sometimes wait until he thought I wasn't looking, and then stealthily adjust the towels so that they draped in just the right way.

Once the discovery of a food stain on the bedspread made him freeze in the middle of a kiss, mutter, “I'll just be a second,” and pad off naked to the kitchen for spot remover.

You see, this was San Francisco in the late eighties, and many of the people we knew had died.

Two of our neighbors had died. And a Greek man who ran a deli. And the editor of the magazine I worked for. Even our doctor had died.

So I suppose that was why we bought our little house, our “crypto-dream-house,” as Tom used to call it, quoting Elizabeth Bishop. By establishing and guarding this shelter, he must have hoped he could protect us both from the stained sheets and fouled toilets and soggy mattresses that are the necessary accessories of death.

Later, when I saw the photographs of Saddam Hussein's atom bomb–proof bunker, with its marble bathrooms and carpeting and candela-brums, I thought, yes, of course—something along those lines.

People in San Francisco talked a lot in those days about “grief management.” Now I look back, and it seems to me that grief was managing
us
all that time: grief, the puppeteer, cool behind the curtain.

When, I wondered, would grief pull off its mask, switch on the light, burst into the room in troops, like cops at a stakeout?

I thought it was going to happen one night in 1988. We were getting dressed for the opera when the telephone rang. It was Tom's friend Caroline, and she was calling to tell him that Ernie, with whom he had once lived for half a dozen years, had died an hour earlier.

“Vincent,” he said to me, putting the phone down. Nothing more, but I knew. I was in the middle of tying my tie, and I remember that I stopped, the tie hanging half-looped around my neck, like a noose, and without saying a word I walked over to Tom and held him, tightly, and then we just stood like that, me holding him and his body shaking, but he never cried, or said a word. And then we let go of each other; I finished tying my tie. And we went to the opera.

The opera that night was a concert version of
Dido and Aeneas
. A famed soprano stood before us, resplendent in feathers and white satin, and sang Dido's deathbed aria:

When I am laid, laid in earth
,

Let my wrongs create

No trouble, no trouble, in thy breast;

Remember me, remember me
,

But ah, forget my fate!

So grief sang, in her feathery gown. Bejeweled grief.
Couture
grief. And it seemed that she was looking at us as she sang, and what were we, after all, but two well-heeled faggots in the last decade of a century we had no assurance we would see the end of?

Whose fate, in any case, would doubtless be forgotten?

How can it be that I've neglected to say what he looked like? That is, what he looked like when he was still alive.

Well, he looked like … the good faggot. Handsome, in a neutered sort of way. He always clipped the hairs out of his nose. His skin was unblemished, his nails tidy as the
maresciallo
's.

He was not tall. Gray streaks ran through his black hair—thick, dark hair, a fringe benefit of Italian blood. Whereas I was going bald early.

Of course, the thing about Italian men is that often, no matter how handsome they are in youth, they age very badly. I suppose I should have been alerted to this likelihood the one time I met Tom's father, who was a second-generation immigrant from Sicily. Although he wasn't yet seventy, he had a face like a shar-pei's. His teeth were yellow from smoking. Moles bloomed on his cheeks. Yet his eyes, his mouth, even his nose—these were Tom's.

It was only after we broke up that his looks really started to go—as if inheritance, after waiting in the wings for decades, had suddenly decided to step forward and stake its claim: I gave this to you, I take this from you. The blessing and curse of the genes.

A year had passed during which we had not seen each other—he had just moved to Rome, I had just moved to Düsseldorf—when out of the blue, I got an assignment to work a film festival in Rome. So naturally I called and told him I was coming. He insisted on meeting me at the airport. When I stepped off the plane, a jowly little man ran up to me, holding a bouquet of violets.

I blinked. Could this be Tom? Since we'd last seen each other he'd gained what looked like forty pounds. His hair had thinned in front, and to compensate, he'd grown it long in the back. He had a ratty beard.

A few days later, while I was waiting to meet him near Torre Argentina, I got to talking with an old lady who came there to feed the stray cats. It seemed that she was one of a group of women—
gattaie
, they were called—who had set up a makeshift cat clinic down among the ruins, a sort of squatter's hospital. The city was trying to evict them, she
said, because many of the cats had feline AIDS and people were afraid of catching it. (“A ludicrous notion,” she added, “since they are separate diseases. But Italians are not very interested in facts.”)

A cat approached—fat and white, blind in one eye. She picked him up and handed him to me. “We call him Nelson,” she said, “after the admiral.”

I smiled at Nelson. His blind eye was clouded and milky, like a piece of Carrara marble. I stroked his neck and he purred. Then Tom appeared, waving at me from across the street. I put Nelson down. “My friend is here,” I told the woman.

She peered. “Is that him? He's very ugly,” she observed, in that mild, uninflected tone that a Roman adopts when he informs you—meaning no offense—that you've gotten quite a bit fatter since the last time you saw each other.

Bidding her goodbye, I hurried to meet him. “Sorry I'm late,” he said. “I got held up by one of my students. Pierluigi.” He groaned. “Those double names—Pierluigi, Piergiorgio—they'll get you every time.”

“Handsome?”


Mamma mia
. And to make matters even worse, a Fascist. I mean, a major Fascist. ‘The man I most admire in the world is Jean-Marie Le Pen,' he wrote in his paper. So naturally I failed him. And then his father called. And then …”

“What?”

“Well … it was all very tiresome.”

We turned a corner, and went into a trattoria. In Rome all social occasions with Tom took place in restaurants. “I only just found this one last week,” he said. “It's got the best pasta and chickpeas.”

The trattoria was stuffy, narrow. We were led to a back table, far from any window. Tom ordered for us—pasta and chickpeas, naturally—and soon enough two bowls of soup arrived, carried by a handsome young waiter with whom he appeared to be on a first-name basis. The first name, in this case, being Enzo.

“Taste that rosemary,” he said, his eyes on Enzo's back.

I tasted. Believe me, I know something about cooking, and no rosemary had ever come near that soup.

After a while, the trattoria got busy. A crowd had gathered in the foyer, businessmen and neighborhood shopkeepers, all waiting for tables to open up, while Tom, with a kind of obstinate disregard, remained rooted to his chair even though we had long since finished our meal. The coffee came. He took a long time stirring in his sugar, then asked me about Düsseldorf. Did I have much of a social life there? Were my friends American or German? What was the food like?

Something of a social life, I answered. I had both German and American friends. The food was … German.

And my apartment?

I leaned back. I was wondering when he was going to work up the courage to ask the question that was obviously on his mind—that is, was I “seeing” anyone in Düsseldorf—when Enzo appeared, and asked very sheepishly if we might mind paying up and getting out. As we could see, people were waiting.

Tom's neck stiffened. “What? You're asking us to leave?”

“I'm sorry,
signore
, but as you see—”

“That's hardly the way to encourage a regular customer, Enzo. Why, for all you know
I might be a journalist, about to write a review of your trattoria for an important American newspaper!”

Enzo spread out his hands. “
Signore
, what can I do? How can I vindicate myself?”

Tom smiled. He pointed to his cheek. “A kiss,” he said.

Straightening his back, Enzo laughed, as if in disbelief. Then he looked over his shoulder. Then he bent down and kissed Tom, very quickly, on the cheek.

“Might he have misunderstood what another person said to him, if the other person were speaking Italian?”

Of course, his claims to have no interest in “that sort of thing” begged the important question of what he was doing in that men's room in the first place.

“Well,” he said, “you know that whenever I'm in New York I always go to Bloomingdale's. And I was shopping for sheets, when nature called. Normally I would never have stayed, once I'd realized that it was
that
kind of men's room. But then your socks caught my eye.”

“My socks?”

“They were all I could see under the door to the stall. Blue and red argyle. I liked them.”

“So that was the only reason you went into the next stall? Because you liked my socks?”

“I suppose.”

“And if it hadn't been for my socks?”

“I would have left. You know I can't bear that sort of atmosphere.”

“But wait a minute … that means that our whole relationship—our whole history together—owes to the fact that you liked my socks.”

“I guess you could put it that way,” Tom said. “Not that I ever would.”

It is worth noting that when we had this conversation, we were looking at china. We seemed always to have our most important conversations while looking at china; even that first afternoon, after the men's room, it was to the china department that we drifted, and in the china department that we told each other our names.

“Oh, this is nice,” Tom said. “Hand-painted, too.”

Because the carnality that had started everything seemed suddenly so remote, I glanced at his crotch.

“The measure of a man,” I began.

He blushed. “Oh, please. Do you like Aynsley?”

“I'd like to do more with you. Preferably without a wall between us.”

He picked up a teacup. “I know a place in London where you can get this stuff dirt cheap. Seconds, of course. Tiny flaws.”

“I'd like to kiss you for about a month.”

He smiled with pleasure, looked over his shoulder. “Ssh,” he said. “People will hear you.”

Spode. Wedgwood. Royal Doulton.

We had our picture taken together. Tom framed a copy, and put it on the desk in the kitchen, the one on which he worked out the menus for the dinners he catered, and wrote
the children's books he could never get published.

His devotion amazed me. Nineteen manuscripts, hundreds of rejection letters, and still he persevered, claiming that he derived enough satisfaction from the mere act of writing, and enough pride from the pleasure the books gave to the children he knew.

For they all read his books in manuscript, those Justins and Sams and Maxes. Their mothers read them too. “Those New York publishers are absolutely crazy not to take these,” Gina said once. “If they did, they'd make a fortune.”

But not even his friend Mary, whose brother worked at Simon & Schuster, ever offered to help him.

He asked her once. I don't know how, but somehow he mustered the wherewithal to ask her. If she could mention him to her brother, mention his books …

Mary's mouth tightened. “But my brother works in the marketing department,” she said. “Probably he doesn't know anyone in children's books.”

That
probably
. It gave everything away. The truth was, she wanted him in his place.

Caterer. Babysitter. Giver of kitchen wisdom. Have I mentioned marriage counselor? If Tom had come into his own, he might no longer have been available.

“Tom, you're so wise!” How often I heard those words, spoken by his weeping married friends. Sitting in our living room, they would sob and vent. Stories would dribble out, of stains and threats and temptations.

And Tom would hand over the box of tissues, pour the tea, and proceed to give the shrewd and reasoned advice for which he was famous.

He was good at it, too. He kept more than one spouse from straying. Unfortunately, it was never his own.

Via in Selci

I'm starting to relax now, to fall into the rhythm of interrogation. Already I've been here for three hours. Once we've gone out for coffee—me, the
maresciallo
, and his deputies. We walked down Via in Selci to Via Cavour, to a bar on the corner, where all three of them bought cigarettes. We ordered espressos. As is the masculine fashion in Italy, the
carabinieri
drank theirs Arabic-fashion, out of shot glasses.

BOOK: The Marble Quilt
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