“She might. Did you overhear that?”
“No. I asked her. Just now.” Clara laid some bath towels in a drawer of the chest. “I wonder what she’s up to, going around with that naïve Pete?”
“I suppose she likes him, that’s simple.”
Clara gave him a slurring look. “She likes any man around better, I can tell you that.”
6
Walter got up Saturday, and on Sunday they went to the Iretons’ for lunch.
It was a fine sunny day, and about twenty people were drinking cocktails on the lawn when Walter and Clara arrived.
Clara stopped at a group that included Ernestine McClintock and the McClintocks’ friend Greta Roda, the painter. Walter walked on. Bill Ireton was telling a joke to the men gathered around the portable bar.
“Same old dope,” Bill was saying. “Always barking up the wrong girl!” The clap of laughter that followed was painful to Walter’s ears. He was at that stage, after the flu, when noises were like physical blows, and it hurt even to comb his hair.
Bill Ireton squeezed Walter’s hand with a hand wet and cold from ice cubes. “I’m sure glad you could make it! Feeling better?”
“Fine now,” Walter said. “Thanks for all your inquiries.”
Betty Ireton came up and welcomed him, too, took him over to meet a week-end guest of theirs, a woman, and from there on Walter circulated by himself, enjoying the springy grass under his feet, and the soothing effect of the alcohol that was going straight to his head.
Bill came over, took Walter’s glass to replenish it, and gave Walter a sign to follow him. “What’s the matter with Clara?” Bill asked as they walked. “She just took Betty’s head off.”
Walter tensed. “About what?”
“About the whole party, I gather. Clara said she didn’t want a drink, and when Betty offered to get her a coke she let Betty know it wasn’t necessary for her to drink anything at all to enjoy herself perfectly well.” Bill minced his voice a little and lifted his eyebrows as Clara did. “Anyway, Betty got the idea she’d have been much happier if she’d stayed at home.”
Walter could imagine the scene exactly. “I’m sorry, Bill. I wouldn’t take it seriously. You know, with me sick all week and Clara working the way she does, she gets edgy once in a while.”
Bill looked doubtful. “If she ever doesn’t want to come, fellow, we’ll understand. We’re always glad to see you, and don’t forget it!”
Walter said nothing. He was thinking that Bill’s words were actually an insult to Clara, if he chose to take them that way, and that he didn’t choose to take them that way, because he understood Bill’s reaction to her completely. Walter moved away across the lawn, looking over the people, the women in bright summer skirts. He realized suddenly that he was looking for Ellie, and there wasn’t a chance that she would be here today. Ellie Briess. Ellie Briess. At least he could remember her name now. The name suited her perfectly, he thought, simple but not ordinary, and a little Germanic. Walter felt himself getting pleasantly high on his second drink. He ate lunch with the McClintocks and Greta Roda on one of the long gliders, assembling his meal from the trays of delicious barbecue and French fried potatoes that the Ireton maid and the two little Ireton girls passed around. When he got up to leave, he staggered, and Bill and Clara came up to walk on either side of him.
“I don’t feel drunk, just awfully tired suddenly,” Walter said.
“You just got out of bed, old man,” Bill said. “You didn’t have much to drink.”
“You’re a good egg,” Walter told him.
But Clara was furious. Walter sat beside her in silence while she drove home—she insisted he wasn’t able to drive—reviling him all the way for his stupidity, his sloth in getting drunk at noon.
“Just because the liquor’s there and nobody stops you from drinking yourself into a stupor!”
He had had only two drinks, and after a cup of coffee at home he felt thoroughly sober and he acted thoroughly sober, sitting in the big armchair in the living-room, reading the Sunday paper. But Clara continued to harangue him, intermittently. She sat across the room from him, sewing buttons on a white dress.
“You’re supposed to be a lawyer, an intellectual. I should think you’d find better things to do with your intellect than soak it in alcohol! A few more episodes like today and we’ll be blacklisted by all our friends.”
Walter looked up at that. “Clara, what is this?” he asked good naturedly. He was debating going up to his study and shutting the door, but often she followed him, accusing him of not being able to take criticism.
“I saw Betty Ireton’s face when you staggered across the lawn. She was disgusted with you!”
“If you think Betty would be disgusted at seeing somebody a little high you must be out of your mind.”
“You couldn’t have seen it, anyway, you were drunk!”
“May I say a few words?” Walter asked, standing up. “You took the trouble to scowl disapproval on the whole gathering today, didn’t you? And to your hostess at that. You’re the one who’s going to get us blacklisted. You’re negative towards everything and everyone.”
“And you’re so positive. Sweetness and light!”
Walter clenched his fists in his pockets and walked a few steps in the room, conscious of a desire to strike her. “I can tell you the Iretons weren’t so fond of you today, and I don’t think they have been for a long time. That goes for a lot of people we know.”
“What’re you talking about? You’re a paranoid! I think you’re a psychopathic case, Walter, I really do!”
“I can enumerate them for you!” Walter said more loudly, advancing towards her. “There’s Jon. You can’t bear it if I go fishing with him. There’s Chad who passed out once. There’s the Whitneys before that. Whatever became of the Whitneys? They just drifted off, didn’t they? Mysteriously. And before that Howard Graz. You certainly gave him a hell of a weekend after we invited him here!”
“All written down and labeled. You must have spent a lot of time preparing this devastating case.”
“What else’ve I got to do at night?” Walter said quickly.
“There we go again. You can’t stay off the subject five minutes, can you?”
“I think I can stay off it permanently. Wouldn’t you like that? Then you can be completely independent of me. You can devote your time exclusively to maneuvering me away from my friends.”
She began to sew again. “They concern you much more than I do, that’s obvious.”
“I mean,” Walter said, his dry throat rasping. “I can’t be a partner to a negative attitude that’s eventually going to alienate me from every living creature in the world!”
“Oh, you’re so concerned with yourself!”
“Clara, I want a divorce.”
She looked up from her sewing with her lips parted. She looked very much as she did whenever he asked her if she minded if he, or they, made an appointment with one of their friends. “I don’t think you meant that,” she said.
“I know you don’t, but I do. It’s not like the time before. I’m not going to believe things can get any better, because obviously they can’t.”
She looked stunned, and he wondered if she were remembering the time before. They had reached the same point exactly, and Clara had threatened to take the veronal she had upstairs. Walter had made a batch of martinis, and had forced her to drink one to pull herself together. He had sat down beside her on the sofa where she was now, and she had broken down and cried and told him that she adored him, and the evening had ended very differently from the way Walter had anticipated.
“It isn’t enough any more to be in love with you—physically—because mentally I despise you,” Walter said quietly. He felt that he was uttering the accumulation of the thousand days and nights when he had never dared say these things, not from lack of courage, but because it was so horrible and so fatal for Clara. He watched her now as he would watch a still-alive thing to which he had
just given a death blow, because he could see that she was believing him, gradually.
“But maybe I can change,” she said with a tremor of tears in her voice. “I can go to an analyst—”
“I don’t think that’ll change you, Clara.” He knew her contempt for psychiatry. He had tried to get her to go to a psychiatrist. She never had.
Her eyes were fixed on him, wide and empty-looking and wet with tears, and it seemed to Walter that even in this breakdown she was in the grip of a fit more frenzied than the times when she had shrieked at him like a harpy. Jeff, restive at their quareling voices, pranced about Clara, licking her hand, but Clara did not show by the movement of a finger that she knew he was there.
“It’s that girl, isn’t it?” Clara asked suddenly.
“What?”
“Don’t pretend. I know. Why don’t you admit it? You want to divorce me so you can have her. You’re infatuated with her silly, cowlike smiles at you!”
Walter frowned. “What girl?”
“Ellie Briess!”
“Ellie Briess?” Walter repeated in an incredulous whisper. “Good God, Clara, you’re out of your head!”
“Do you deny it?” Clara demanded.
“It’s not worth denying!”
“It’s true, isn’t it? At least admit it. Tell the truth for once!”
Walter felt a shiver down his spine. His mind shifted, trying to adjust to quite a different situation, the handling of someone mentally deranged. “Clara, I’ve seen the girl only twice. She’s got absolutely nothing to do with us.”
“I don’t believe you. You’ve been seeing her on the sly—evenings when you don’t come home at six-thirty.”
“What evenings? Last Monday? That’s the only day I went to work since I’ve met her.”
“Sunday!”
Walter swallowed. He remembered he had taken a long walk Sunday morning, the morning after he met the girl. “Haven’t we got reason enough to end this without dragging in fantasies?”
Clara’s mouth trembled. “You won’t give me another chance?”
“No.”
“Then I’ll take that veronal tonight,” Clara said in a suddenly calm voice.
“No, you won’t,” Walter went to the bar, poured a brandy for her and brought it to her.
She took it in her shaking fingers and drained it at once, not even looking to see what it was. “You think I’m joking, don’t you, because I didn’t the other time. But I will now!”
“That’s a threat, darling.”
“Don’t call me ‘darling,’ you despise me.” She stood up. “Leave me alone! At least give me some privacy!”
Walter felt another start of alarm. She did look insane now with her brown eyes hard and bright as stone, her figure rigid as if an epileptic seizure had caught her and left her standing balanced like a column of rock. “Privacy for what?”
“To kill myself!”
He made an involuntary half turn to go to her dressing-table upstairs where he thought the pills were, then looked back at her.
“You don’t know where they are. I’ve hidden them.”
“Clara, let’s not be melodramatic.”
“Then leave me alone!”
“All right, I will.”
He ran upstairs to his study, closed the door, and walked around for a few moments, drawing on a cigarette. He didn’t believe she would. It was partly a threat and partly her real terror of being alone with herself. But it would subside again. Tomorrow she would be as hard and self-righteous as ever. And meanwhile was he supposed to play nursemaid to her all her life, be chained to her because of a threat? He yanked the door open and ran downstairs.
She was not in the living-room, and he called to her, then ran up the stairs again. He found her in the bedroom. She turned quickly to him, concealing something in the white dress she carried, or perhaps only holding the dress against her while she waited for him to leave. Then as she shook the dress out and slipped a hanger into it he saw that she had nothing else in her hands. When she walked to the closet Walter saw a brandy inhaler half full of brandy on the windowsill. He looked at it incredulously for a moment.
“Why don’t you leave me alone?” she asked. “Why don’t you go out and take a long walk?”
Jeff stopped his gay trotting around the room, sat down and looked straight at Walter as if he waited, too, for him to get out.
“All right, I just might do that,” Walter said, and he let the bedroom door slam when he went out.
He went back to his study. He was not staying to protect her, he told himself, he just didn’t happen to want to take a walk. He started violently as the door opened behind him.
“I thought I should remind you, to make you feel a little better, that after tonight you can be free to spend all your time with Ellie Briess!”
Walter had a glass paperweight in his hand, and for an instant he wanted to throw it at her. He banged the paperweight down on the desk and strode past her out of the room, angry as he had never been before, yet still able to see himself objectively—a furiously angry man, hurling shirts and a pair of trousers into a suitcase, toothbrush, washrag, and as an afterthought the briefcase he would need tomorrow. He snapped the suitcase shut.
“The house is all yours tonight,” he called to her as he passed her in the hall.
Walter got into his car. He was on the North Island Parkway before he realized he did not know where he was going. To New York? He could go to Jon’s. But he didn’t want to spill out all his troubles to Jon. Walter took the next exit lane and found himself in a little community that he did not recognize. He saw a movie theater close by. Walter parked his car and went in. He sat in the balcony and stared at the screen and smoked. He was going to force himself to sit there until they got around to the animated cartoon that he had come in on. Somewhere near the end of the feature picture, Walter thought, if Clara had taken the sleeping pills, it was already too late for a stomach pump to be of much help. A thrust of panic caught him unawares.
He got up and went out.
7
On the bed-table stood a greenish bottle that was empty and a glass with a little water in it.
“Clara?” He picked her up by her shoulders and shook her.
She didn’t stir at all, her mouth hung open. Walter grabbed her wrist. There was a pulse and it felt even, strong and normal, he thought. He went into the bathroom and wet a bath towel with cold water, brought it back and wiped her face with it. There was no reaction. He slapped her face.
“Clara! Wake up!”
He sat her up, but she was limp as a rag doll. Hopeless to try to get coffee down her throat, he thought. Her tongue lolled out of her mouth. He ran into the hall to the telephone.
Dr. Pietrich was not in, but his housemaid gave him the number of another doctor. The second doctor said he could be there in fifteen minutes.
Twenty-five minutes went by, and Walter was in terror that she was going to cease breathing before his eyes, but the shallow breathing went on. The doctor arrived and went briskly to work with a stomach pump. Walter poured warm water for him into the funnel at one end of the tube. Nothing came out of her but the water, colored with a little bloody mucous. The doctor gave her two injections, then tried the pump again. Walter watched her half-open eyes, the limp unnatural-looking mouth, for any signs of consciousness. He saw none at all.
“Do you think she’ll live?” he asked.
“How do I know?” the doctor said irritably. “She’s not waking up. She’ll have to go to the hospital.”
Walter disliked the doctor intensely.
A few moments later Walter carried Clara in his arms down the stairs and out to the car.
Some of the doctors, Walter thought, acted as if it were most annoying that they had to bother with a suicide case. Or as if they assumed automatically that he was to blame.
“Ever had any trouble with her heart?” a doctor asked.
“No,” Walter said. “Do you think she’ll live?
”
The doctors eyebrows went up indifferently, and he continued to write in his tablet. “Depends on her heart,” the doctor said. He led the way down the corridor.
She was lying under a transparent oxygen tent. The nurse was rubbing her arm for another injection, and Walter winced as the big needle slid two inches up her vein. Clara didn’t twitch.
“She’ll just either sleep it off or not,” the doctor said.
Walter leaned over and studied Clara’s face intently. Her mouth was still lifeless, misshapen, lips slightly drawn back from her teeth. It gave her face an expression Walter had never seen before, an expression like that of death, he thought. He believed now that Clara didn’t want to live. And instead of her unconscious will working to live as a normal person’s would, he imagined her will pulling her towards death, and he felt helpless.
By two in the morning there was no change in her condition, and Walter went home. He called the hospital at intervals, and the message was always “No change.” At about six in the morning he had a cup of coffee and a brandy and drove off to the hospital. Claudia came at seven, and he didn’t want to see her because he didn’t know what to tell her.
Clara lay in exactly the same position. He thought her eyelids had swollen a little. There was something horribly fetuslike about the swollen eyelids and the expressionless mouth. The doctor told him that her blood pressure had decreased slightly, which was a bad sign, but so far as her heart went, she seemed to be holding her own.
“Do you think she’ll live?”
“I just can’t answer that question. She took enough to kill her, if you hadn’t brought her here. We should know in another forty-eight hours.”
“Forty-eight hours!”
“The coma could last even longer, but if it does I doubt if she’ll pull out.”
Around nine o’clock Walter drove to New York. His suitcase was still in the back of the car, and he got his briefcase out of it before he went up to the office. It seemed to him that he had never intended to go to an hotel with the suitcase, that it was only a prop in his real intent to get out of the house in order to let Clara kill herself without his interference. Walter could not escape the fact that he had known she was going to take the pills. He could tell himself that he hadn’t really thought she would take them, because she hadn’t the other time, but this time had been different—and he knew it. In a sense, he thought, he had killed her—if she died. And therefore he thought he must have wanted to kill her.