Page 34 of All the King's Men


  “Why?”

  “Listen, pal, there was a man name Dante, who said that the truly proud man knew his own worth could never commit the sin of envy, for he could believe that there was no one for him to envy. He might just as well have said that the proud man who knew his own worth would not be susceptible to flattery, for he would believe that there was nothing anybody else could tell him about his own worth he didn’t know already. No, you couldn’t be flattered.”

  “Not by him, anyway,” Adam said grimly.

  “Not by anybody,” I said. “And he knows it.”

  “What does he try for, then? Does he think I–”

  “Guess again,” I said.

  He stood there in the middle of the frayed green carpet and stared at me, head slightly lowered, with the slightest shade–not of doubt or perturbation–over the fine abstract blue of the eyes. It was just the shade of question, of puzzlement.

  But that is something. Not much, but something. It is not the left to the jaw and it does not rock them on their heels. It does no make the breath come sharp. It is just the tap on the nose, the scrape across with the rough heel of the glove. Nothing lethal, just a moment’s pause. But it is an advantage. Push it.

  So I repeated, “Guess again.”

  He did not answer, looking at me, with the shade deeper like a cloud passing suddenly over blue water.

  “All right,” I said, “I’ll tell you. He knows you are the best around, but you don’t cash in on it. So obviously, you don’t want money, or you would charge folks something like the others in the trade or would hang on to what you do take. You don’t want fun, or you would get some, for you are famous, relatively young, and not crippled. You don’t want comfort, or you would quit working yourself like a navvy and wouldn’t live in this slum. But he knows what you want.”

  “I don’t want anything he can give me,” Adam affirmed.

  “Are you sure, Adam?” I said. “Are you sure?”

  “Damn it–” he began, and the blood was up in his cheeks.

  “He knows what you want,” I cut in. “I can put it in a word, Adam.”

  “What?”

  “You want to do good,” I said.

  That stopped him. His mouth was open like a fish’s gaping for air.

  “Sure,” I said, “that’s it. He knows your secret.”

  “I don’t see what–” he began, fiercely again.

  But I cut in, saying, “Easy now, it’s no disgrace. It’s just eccentric. That you can’t see somebody sick without having to put your hands on him. That you can’t see something rotten inside him without wanting to take a knife in your strong, white, and damned welleducated fingers, pal, and cut it out. It is merely eccentric, pal. Or maybe it is a kind of supersickness you’ve got yourself.”

  “There’s a hell of a lot of sick people,” he said glumly, “but I don’t see–”

  “Pain is evil,” I said, cheerfully.

  “Pain is an_ evil,” he said, “but it is not evil–it is not evil in itself,” and took a step toward me, looking at me like an enemy.

  “That’s the kind of question I don’t debate when I’ve got the toothache,” I retorted, “but the fact remains that you are the way you are. And the Boss–” I delicately emphasized the word Boss_–”knows it. He knows what you want. He knows your weakness, pal. You want to do good, and he is going to let you do good in wholesale lots.”

  “Good,” he said, wolfishly, and twisted his long, thin upper lip, “good–that’s a hell of a word to use around where he is.”

  “Is it?” I asked casually.

  “A thing does not grow except in its proper climate, and you know what kind of a climate that man creates. Or ought to know.”

  I shrugged. “A thing is good in itself–if it is good. A guy gets ants in his pants and writes a sonnet. Is the sonnet less of a good–if it good, which I doubt–because the dame he got the ants over happened to be married to somebody else, so that his passion, as they say, was illicit? Is the rose less of a rose because–”

  “You are completely irrelevant,” he said.

  “So I am irrelevant,” I said, and got out of the chair. “That’s what you always used to say when I got in a corner in an argument a thousand years ago when we were boys and argued all night. Could a first-class boxer whip a first-class wrestler? Could a lion whip a tiger? Is Keats better than Shelley? The good, the true, and the beautiful. Is there A God? We argued all night and I always won, but you–you bastard–” and I slapped him on the shoulder–”you always said I was irrelevant. But little Jackie is never irrelevant. Nor is he immaterial, and–” I looked around, scooped up my hat and coat–”I am going to leave you with that thought and–”

  “A hell of a thought it is,” he said, but he was grinning now, he was my pal now, he was the Friend of My Youth.

  But I ignored him anyway, saying–”You can’t say I don’t put the cards on the table, me and the Boss, but I’m hauling out, for I catch the midnight to Memphis, where I am going to interview a medium.”

  “A medium?” he echoed.

  “An accomplished medium maned Miss Littlepaugh, and she is going to give me word from the Other Shore that the Boss’s hospital is going to have a dark, handsome, famous, son-of-a-bitch of a director named Stanton.” And with that I slammed his door and was running and stumbling down the dark stairs, for it was the kind of apartment house where the bulb burns out and nobody ever puts a new one in and there is always a kiddie car left on a landing and the carpet is worn to ribbons and the air smells dankly of dogs, diapers, cabbage, old women, burnt grease, and the eternal fate of man.

  I stood in the dark street and looked back at the building. The shade of a window was up and I looked in where a heavy, bald man in shirt sleeves sat at a table in what is called a “dinette” and slumped above a plate like a sack propped in a chair, while a child stood at his elbow, plucking at him, and a woman in a slack colorless dress and hair stringing down brought a steaming saucepan from the stove, for Poppa had come home late as usual with his bunion hurting, and the rent was past due and Johnnie needed shoes and Susie’s report card wasn’t any good and Susie stood at his elbow, plucking at him feebly, and staring at him with her imbecilic eyes and breathing through her adenoids, and the Maxfield Parrish picture was askew on the wall with its blues all having the savage tint of copper sulphate in the glaring light from the unshaded bulb hanging from the ceiling. And somewhere else in the building a dog barked, somewhere else a baby was crying in automatic gasps. And that was Life and Adam Stanton lived in the middle of it, as close as he could get to it; he snuggled up to Life, breathing the cabbage smell, stumbling on the kiddie car, bowing to the young just-married, gum-chewing, hand-holding couple in the hall, hearing through the thin partition the sounds made by the old woman who would be dead (it was cancer he had told me) before summer, pacing the frayed green carpet among the books and broken-down chairs. He snuggled up to Life, to keep warm perhaps, for he didn’t have any life of his own–just the office, the knife, the monastic room. Or perhaps he didn’t snuggle to keep warm. Perhaps he leaned over Life with his hand on the pulse, watching from the deep-set, abstract, blue clinical eyes, slightly shadowed, leaning ready to pop in the pill, pour the potion, apply the knife. Perhaps he had to be close in order to keep a reason for the things he did. To make the things he did be themselves Life. And not merely a delightful exercise of technical skill which man had been able to achieve because he, of all the animals, had a fine thumb.

  Which is nonsense, for whatever you live is Life. That is something to remember when you meet the old classmate who says, “Well, now on our last expedition up the Congo–” or the one who says, “Gee, I got the sweetest little wife and three of the swellest kids ever–” You must remember it when you sit in hotel lobbies or lean over bars to talk to the bartender or stand in a dark street at night, in early March, and stare into a lighted window. And remember little Susie in there has adenoids and the bread is probably burned,
and turn up the street, for the time has come to hand me down that walking cane, for I got to catch that midnight train, for all my sin is taken away. For whatever you live is Life.

  As I turned away, there was the wild burst of music from up in the building, louder than the baby’s cry, shaking the mortar out of the old brick work. It was Adam’s piano.

  I caught the train for Memphis, stayed three days, had my séance with Miss Littlepaugh, and returned. With some photostats and an affidavit in my brief case.

  Upon my return I found the call in my box. It was Anne’s number, then Anne’s voice on the wire, and, as always, the little leap and plunk in my heart like a frog jumping into a lily pool. With the ripples spreading round.

  It was her voice saying she had to see me. I told her that was easy, she could see me all the rest of her life. But she ignored that little joke, as no doubt it deserved, and said for me to meet her right away. “At the Crescent Cove,” I suggested, and she agreed. The Crescent Cove was Slade’s place.

  I was there first, and had a drink with Slade himself in the midst of soft lights and sweet music and the gleam of chromium, and looked at Slade’s yellow-ivory bullet head and expensive tailoring and at the reigning blond at the cash register, and remembered wistfully the morning long ago in Prohibition, when in the back room of his fly-bitten speakeasy Slade, with hair on his head than and not a dime in his pocket, had refused to fall in with Duffy’s attempt to force beer on Cousin Willie from the country, who was, it turned out, Willie Stark, and who wanted orange pop. That had fixed Slade for ever. So now I had my drink, and looking at him, marveled how little is required for a man to be lost or saved.

  And I looked up into the mirror of the bar and saw Anne Stanton come in the door. Or rather, her image come through the image of the door. For the moment I did not turn to face the reality. Instead, I looked at the image which hung there in the glass like a recollection caught in the ice of the mind–you have seen, in winter in the clear ice of a frozen stream, some clean bright gold and red leaf embedded to make you think suddenly of the time when all the bright gold and red leaves had been on the trees like a party and the sunshine had poured down over them as though it would never stop. But it wasn’t a recollection, it was Anne Stanton herself, who stood there in the cool room of the looking glass, above the bar barricade of bright bottles and siphons across some distance of blue carpet, a girl–well, not exactly a girl any more, a young woman about five-feet-four with the trimmest pair of nervous ankles and smallish hips which, however, looked as round as though they had been turned on a lathe, and a waist just the width to make you wonder if you could span it with your hand, and all of this done up in a swatch of gray flannel which pretended to a severe mannish cut but actually did nothing but scream for attention to some very unmannish arrangements within.

  She was standing there, not quite ready to start patting the blue carpet with an impatient toe, turning her smooth, cool face (under a light-blue felt hat) slowly from one side to the other to survey the room. I caught the flash of blue in her eyes in the mirror. When she was just behind me, she said, “Jack.”

  I didn’t look round. “Slade,” I said, “this strange woman keeps following me round, and I thought you ran a respectable place. What the hell are you going to do about it?”

  Slade had swung round to look at the strange woman, whose face was all at once chalk-white and whose eyes were uttering sparks like a couple of arc lights. “Lady,” Slade said, “now look here, lady–”

  Then the lady suddenly overcame the paralysis which had frozen her tongue and the blood hit her cheeks. “Jack Burden!” she said, “if you don’t–”

  “She knows your name,” Slade said.

  I turned around to face the reality which was not something caught in the ice of the mind but was something now flushed, feline, lethal, and electric and about to blow a fuse. “Well, I declare,” I said, “if it isn’t my fiancée! Say, Slade, I want you to meet Anne Stanton. We’re going to get married.”

  “Gee,” Slade said, his pan as dead as something in the sink next morning, “I’m glad ter–”

  “We’re getting married in twenty-hundred-and-fifty,” I said. “It will be a June wedding, with–”

  “It will be a March murder,” Anne said, “right now.” Then she smiled, and the blood subsided in her cheeks, and she put out her hand to Slade.

  “Glad ter meetcha,” Slade said, and though the face which he exhibited might well have belonged to a wooden Indian, the eyes in it didn’t miss any of the details suggested by the coat suit. “How about a drink?” he asked.

  “Thank you,” Anne said, and settled on a Martini After the drink, she said, “Jack, we’ve got to go,” thanked Slade again, and led me away into the night full of neon lights, gasoline fumes, the odor of roasted coffee, and the honk of taxis.

  “You have a wonderful sense of humor,” she said.

  “Where are we going? I sidestepped her remark.

  “You are such a smart aleck.”

  “Where are we going?”

  “Aren’t you ever going to grow up?”

  “Where are we going?”

  We were walking aimlessly down the side street past the swinging doors of the bars and oyster joints and past newsstands and old women selling flowers. I bought some gardenias, gave them to her, and said, “I reckon I am a smart aleck, bit it is just a way to pass the time.”

  We walk on another half block, threading through the crowd that drifted and eddied in and out of the swinging doors.

  “Where are we going?”

  “I wouldn’t be going anywhere with you,” she said, “if I didn’t have to talk to you.”

  We were passing another old woman selling flowers. So I took another bunch of gardenias, laid down my four bits, and shoved the blossoms at Anne Stanton. “If you can’t be civil,” I said, “I’m going to smother you in these damned things.”

  “All right,” she said, and laughed, “all right, I’ll be good.” And she swung on to my arm and matched her step to mine, holding the flowers in her free hand, her bag tucked under the off elbow.

  We kept step, not talking for a half block. I looked down, watching her feet flick out, one-two, one-two. She was wearing black suède shoes, very severe, very mannish, and she clicked the pavement with authority, but they were small and the fine ankles flickered, one-two, one-two, hypnotically.

  Then I said, “Where are we going?”

  “To walk,” she said, “just walk. I’m too restless to be still.”

  We walked on, down toward the river.

  “I had to talk to you,” she said.

  “Well, talk then. Sing. Spill.”

  “Not now,” she said soberly and looked up at me and I saw in the light of the street lamp that her face was very serious, even worried. The flesh seemed smoothed back, even painfully taut over the wonderful perfection of the bone structure of her face. There wasn’t any waste material in that face, and always there was a hint in it of a trained-down, keyed-up intensity, though an intensity kept under the smooth surface of calm, like a flame behind glass. But the intensity was keyed up more than usual, I could see. And I had the feeling that id you turned the wick up a fraction the glass might crack.

  I didn’t reply, and we took a few more paces. Then she said, “Later. Now just walk.”

  So we walked. We had left the streets where the bars and pool-rooms and restaurants were, and the blare or whimper of music from beyond the swinging doors. We passed down a grubby, dark street where a couple of boys scurried along by the walls of the houses, uttering short, lost-sounding, hollow calls, like marsh birds. The shutters were all closed on these houses, with here and there a tiny chink of light showing, or perhaps the faint sound of voices. Later in the spring, when the weather turned, people would be sitting out on the sidewalk stoops here in the evenings, talking back and forth, and now and then, if you were a man passing, one of the women would say in a conversational tone, “Hey, bud, you want it?” For thi
s was he edge of the crib section, and some of these houses were cribs. But at this season, at night, whatever kinds of life were in those houses–the good life and the bad life–were still withdrawn deep inside the old husks of damp, crumbling brick or flaking wood. A month from now, in early April, at the time when far away, outside the city, the water hyacinths, would be covering every inch of bayou, lagoon, creek, and backwater wit a spiritual-mauve to obscene-purple, violent, vulgar, fleshy, solid, throttling mass of bloom over the black water, and the first heartbreaking, misty green, like girlhood dreams, on the old cypresses would have settled down to be leaf and not a damned thing else, and the arm-thick, mud-colored, slime-slick moccasins would heave out of the swamp and try to cross the highway and your front tire hitting one would give a slight bump and make a sound like kerwhush_ and a tiny thump when he slapped heavily up against the underside of the fender, and the insects would come boiling out of the swamps and day and night the whole air would vibrate with them with a sound like an electric fan, and if it was night the owls back in the swamps would be whoo_ing and moaning like love and death and damnation, or one would sail out of the pitch dark into the rays of your headlights and plunge against the radiator to explode like a ripped feather bolster, and the fields would be deep in that rank, hairy or slick, juicy, sticky grass which the cattle gorge on and never get flesh over the ribs for that grass is in that black soil and no matter how far the roots could ever go, if the roots were God knows how deep, there would never be anything but that black, grease-clotted soil and no stone down there to put calcium into that grass–well, a month from now, in early April, when all those things would be happening beyond the suburbs, the husks of the old houses in the street where Anne Stanton and I were walking would, if it were evening, crack and spill out onto the stoops and into the street all that life which was now sealed up within.

  But now the street was blank, and dim, with a leaning lamppost at the end of the block, and the cobbles oily-greasy-glimmering in its rays and the houses shuttered, and the whole thing looked like a set for a play. You expected to see the heroine saunter up, lean against the lamppost and light a cigarette. She didn’t come, however, and Anne Stanton and I walked straight through the set, which you knew was cardboard until you put out your hand to touch the damp, furry brick or spongy stucco. We walked on through without talking. Perhaps for the reason that if you are in a place like that which looks like a cardboard stage set and is so damned q-u-a-i-n-t_, whatever you say will sound as though it had been written by some lop-haired, swivel-hipped fellow who lived in one of those cardboard houses in an upstairs apartment (overlooking the patio–Oh, Jesus, yes, overlooking the patio) and wrote a play for the Little Theater which began with the heroine sauntering into a dim street between rows of cardboard houses and leaning against an askew lamppost to light a cigarette. But Anne Stanton was not that heroine, so she didn’t lean against the lamppost and didn’t say a word, and we kept on walking.

 
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