Part 2 (2/2)

Years later, the first time Joan shopped at Au Printemps, she would remember that, and would do as she'd been told. And she would remember Jacqui too a few years later when, at Lambert Field in St. Louis, deplaning with her family from a European trip, she was approached by a news crew of very cool, very smart blacks from KSDF-TV, carrying camera and wind-baffled shotgun mike, who asked if she had any suggestions for improvement of the airport's services. ”Way-el,” she said thoughtfully, smiling prettily, batting her lashes and speaking in her sweetest Possum Hollow drawl. (Martin and the children had fled into the crowd.) She tapped her mouth with a bejewelled finger and gazed away down the baggage area, then said pertly, as if it were something she'd been thinking for a long, long time and rather hated to bring up, ”Ah thank it would be nice if awl these people spoke French.” Her performance was included in that night's local news. Her parents missed it, as was just as well. Relatives telephoned to report with pleasure that Joanie had been on television. No one mentioned that anything she'd said was peculiar.

”I wonder if I'll ever get to Paris,” she'd said that afternoon in Jacqui's apartment.

Jacqui had laughed like a young girl, though she was then over forty. ”Keep playing the piano and don't theenk twice,” Jacqui said. ”If you don't go to Paris, then Paris will have to come to you.”

Where would they have gone, Joan wondered now, when the neighborhood had grown too dangerous to live in? Were they still alive? It came to her suddenly, for no apparent reason, that Pete Duggers had looked like the hero of her favorite childhood book, Mr. Mixiedough, in the story of the whole world's slipping into darkness. It was a book she'd wanted for Evan and Mary, but there seemed to be no copies left anywhere; not even the book-search people from whom Martin got his rare old books could find a trace of it. Had it been the same, perhaps, with Pete and Jacqui Duggers-swallowed into blackness? She'd asked about him once at the Abbey, on Thirteenth Street in New York, when she'd gone-three times-to a show called The Hoofers, which had brought back all the great soft-shoe and tap men. On the sidewalk in front of the theater afterward, while she was waiting for Martin to come and pick her up, she'd talked with Bojangles Robinson and Sandman Sims-they'd shown her some steps and had laughed and clapped their hands, dancing one on each side of her-and she'd asked if either of them had ever heard of Pete Duggers.

The Sandman rolled up his eyes and lifted off his hat as if to look inside it. ”Duggers,” he'd said, searching through his memory.

”You say the man worked out of San Looie?” Bojangles said.

”I played piano for his wife,” Joan said. ”She taught ballet.”

”Duggers,” said the Sandman. ”That surely does sound familiar.”

”White man married to a ballet teacher,” Bojangles said, and ran his hand across his mouth. ”Boy, that surely rings a bell, some way.”

”Duggers,” said the Sandman, squinting at the lighted sky. ”Duggers.”

”He used to go faster and faster and then suddenly stand still,” she said. ”He was a wonderful dancer.”

”Duggers,” Bojangles echoed, thoughtful, staring at his shoes. ”I know the man sure as I'm standing here. I got him right on the tip of my mind.”

At the motel that night, sixty miles past St. Louis-it was a new Ramada Inn, as new as the concrete and dark-earth slash through what had lately been farmland-Joan sat up after Martin was asleep, unable to sleep herself, waiting for the Demerol to start working. On the mirror-smooth walnut formica desk lay Martin's paper, ”Homeric Justice and the Artful Lie.” Though he'd delivered it already, it was a maze of revisions. He'd been ”working it over a bit,” as he said, before he'd at last given up in despair, as usual, kissed her on the cheek, and gone to bed. Eventually, no doubt, he'd include it in some book, or make it the plan of some story or novel. He was forever revising, like her stern-jawed, icy-eyed grandmother's G.o.d-or like G.o.d up to a point. Joan Orrick thought for an instant-then efficiently blocked the thought-of the doctor in New York who had spoken to them, incredibly, of psychiatric help and ”the power of prayer.” She slid Martin's paper toward her with two fingers, glancing at the beginning. ”In Attic Greek,” he'd written-and then came something in, presumably, Greek.

She looked for perhaps half a minute at the writing, tortuous, cranky, as familiar as her own but more moving to her: it contained all their years-they'd been married at nineteen, had been married for more than half their fives-and she found herself thinking (she was not aware of why) of her grandmother Frazier's sternly Southern Baptist attic: old Christian Heralds full of pictures of angels, stacked tight under cobwebbed rafters; small oak-leaved picture frames as moldy as old bread; a squat deal dresser with broken gla.s.s handles; tied-up bundles of music as brown-s.p.a.ckled and brittle as her grandmother's hands; and on the attic's far side, trunks of clothes-dusty black and what she thought of as Confederate gray. The old woman's predictions had been terrible and sure, or so legend had it. Her brother, Joan Orrick's great-uncle Frank, would stand on the porch of his cabin by the river when a tornado came roaring like a thousand trains, and would fire at the wind with a shotgun.

The cabin was long gone, like her grandmother's house, like her grandmother, like Martin's beloved Homer. She touched the pulse in her throat with two fingers and looked at her watch. Normal, and yet she felt drained, weary. Not entirely an effect of the wine they'd had at dinner, though also it was not yet the drug. She slid away the paper, rose quietly, and moved past the wide, still bed where her husband lay sleeping, his broad, mole-specked back and shoulders uncovered, motionless as marble except for his breathing, exactly as he'd always slept, winter and summer. She was slightly surprised for an instant by his lighted gray hair. Outside, the parking lot was dusty with the still, cold light of lamps half hidden among maples the bulldozers had left. She looked hastily back into the clean, noncommittal room.

When she'd crawled into bed with him, carefully not waking him, she lay for a time with her eyes open, eyes that might have seemed to a stranger, she knew, as cold and remote as her grandmother's. As she drifted toward sleep it crossed her mind-her lips and ringless right hand on Martin's arm-that sooner or later everyone, of course, knows the future.

THE MUSIC LOVER.

Some years ago there lived in our city a man named Professor Alfred Klingman, who was a music lover. He was a professor of Germanic philology or something of the sort-or had been before his retirement-but he never spoke with anyone about his academic specialty, nor did anyone ever speak with him about anything but music or, occasionally, the weather. He'd lost his wife many years before this story begins and had lived alone in his dingy downtown apartment ever since, without pets, without plants, without even a clock to attend to. Except in the evenings, when he attended concerts, he never went out but sat all day listening to orchestral music on the radio, or, on Sat.u.r.day afternoons, the opera. His solitary existence made him-as no doubt he'd have admitted himself, since he was by no means a fool-peculiar. One might have thought, to look at him, that he lived alone for fear of giving other creatures offense. Even in the presence of lapdogs, you might have thought, Professor Klingman would feel inferior. He walked with his shoulders drawn in and his raw, red face stuck out, anxiously smiling, timidly bowing to everyone he pa.s.sed, even cats and, occasionally, lampposts.

This story makes use of parts of Thomas Mann's ”Disillusionment,” all slightly altered.

But every man who survives in this world has at least one area in which he escapes his perhaps otherwise miserable condition, and for Professor Klingman this area was music, his wife having been a piano teacher. Whenever there was a concert-which was nearly every night except in summertime, since our city had a famous school of music, a professional symphony, an amateur philharmonic orchestra, and innumerable choirs-Professor Klingman would dress himself nervously and meticulously in his old brown suit, his rather yellow white s.h.i.+rt, and black bow tie, and would pull on his long brown overcoat, fit his brown hat on his head, take up his cane, and, after inspecting himself for a moment in his mirror, exactly as an orchestra conductor might have done, or a featured soloist, he would hurry, his near-sighted, smiling face thrown forward, looking terrified and slightly insane, to the civic auditorium. As soon as he entered the hall he would look in panic at the clock above the ticket window and would check it against his gold pocket.w.a.tch. Though he was invariably some twenty minutes early, his look of furious anxiety would remain until he'd checked his coat and hat, climbed the wide red-carpeted stairs (helping himself with his crooked brown cane), and made his way to his accustomed seat in the front row of the balcony, right-hand side, the area his wife had found acoustically most pleasing. Then he would relax to a certain extent, sitting motionless except for a minuscule tremble, his pale eyes glittering and darting as the theater filled. He had bushy red eyebrows and a large, lumpy nose. His ears were extraordinarily large and as pink as flowers. In his nostrils and ears he had tufts of red hair (and in one ear a large gray hearing aid), and there was yellowish fuzz on the backs of his fingers. The hair on the top of his head was white.

Sometimes before the orchestra came on he would push his program toward the person beside him and whisper timidly, pointing to some item, ”Excuse me, what's this? What's this piece? Do you know it?” The question was abrupt, one might even say frantic, since Professor Klingman had lost, in the years since his good wife's death, the technique of polite conversation. It was she, of course, who had done all their talking. One might not unnaturally have gotten the idea that, despite his smile, the professor fiercely disapproved of the item which was about to be performed (perhaps he imagined it immoral, or fascistic) and was merely checking to make sure the piece was what he thought it was before steeling himself and rising to cry out, in his piping voice, challenging and halting the performance. If, as sometimes happened, the person beside him was familiar with the piece and could hum a few bars, Professor Klingman would brighten, crying ”Yes, yes! Thank you!” in a voice embarra.s.singly cracked by emotion. Strangers could not know that in former years, attending concerts with Mrs. Klingman, the professor had always been advised by his wife what tunes he was about to be favored with. No charitable person, observing his curious concert behavior, could doubt that Alfred Klingman's feelings were deep and sincere, but he was, no question about it, something of a nuisance, even for an elderly person. Also people noticed that he was singularly uninformed about music, for a concert devotee. He could not identify by number and key any symphony but Beethoven's Fifth, and even in that case he could never recall the key.

On the other hand, no one could be more responsive to the anguished wellings and sweet palpitations of the music itself. When Mahler was played, or even the coolest, most objective of Bruckner, tears would run streaming down Professor Klingman's nose, and sometimes he would sob audibly, so that everyone around him was made uncomfortable. At musical jokes he would sometimes guffaw, though how a man so ignorant could know that the musical jokes were jokes was hard to see. And even when the music was neither tragic nor comic, merely sang its way along, in a manner of speaking-one of Mozart's less dramatic concertos, for instance-Professor Klingman could manage to disgruntle his neighbors. Sometimes he tapped his feet, sometimes he nodded (slightly out of time), and sometimes, especially to Kabalevsky or Liszt, he would thump his rolled-up program. People touched him on the shoulder, whispered politely but sternly in his ear. His contrition, at such times, was touching to see, but it lasted for only a few minutes. Charitable people ignored him and said, when the subject of his concert behavior came up, ”Well, music is all the poor man has, you know,” or, ”Well, he feels things deeply, you know; too bad more people don't.” All our concert-hall ushers knew him, and the leader of the music school's string quartet would always look up and smile if he was present. Not that he was loved universally, of course. Sometimes children who were not well brought up-and sometimes even college students-mimicked him cruelly, thumping their programs, bobbing their heads, and pretending to swallow back agonized sobs. To such mockery, of course, Professor Klingman was oblivious. From the first note to the last, even if the concert was abysmal, Professor Klingman was in heaven.

One evening in late autumn, Professor Klingman attended a School of Music concert which was advertised as offering ”three contemporary pieces.” He would never have attended had he any idea what he was in for. Professor Klingman, it should be mentioned, was by no means a man of conservative taste. He had disgraced himself by literally whooping his emotion at Janek's Slavonic ma.s.s and had once sat, enraptured and stunned, unable to applaud, at a performance of Bartk's Concerto for Percussion, which he later remembered as Stravinsky's greatest masterpiece. But this particular departure from musical tradition-this so-called ”three contemporary pieces”-was a new and terrible experience for him. It opened with a cello concerto in which the soloist used not a bow but a saw, a fact Professor Klingman missed at first, because of his eyesight. By the end of the piece, which was distressing enough in any case, the cello had been sawed in two. The second piece featured two radios tuned to different stations and a violinist expressing his musical impressions of a life-sized photograph of an ape.

Timid as Professor Klingman was in life's more ordinary situations, he reacted to this music with the unselfconscious abandon that had made him mildly notorious among concert-goers in our city. He wrung his fingers, groaned, covered his eyes, and on one occasion cried out loudly, ”Oh my G.o.d! My G.o.d!” On each side of him and behind him, embarra.s.sed fellow sufferers labored to shush him-to no avail. He caught the pale hand of the lady beside him (Mrs. Phillips, the wife of Reverend Irving Phillips, who plays second clarinet in our philharmonic orchestra) and whispered, violently shaking, ”Insane!”

”Be still!” she whispered, cold as ice, though it was clear she was not in complete disagreement. She was tall and stately, with a pale blue face, a face almost exactly the color of her pearls. She was breathing like a person who is about to experience a heart attack-whether from anger at the musical outrage or from anger at the mad old man beside her, no one could say.

Mrs. Phillips' words had no effect on the professor, but a moment later he became aware, as one could see by the anxious craning of his neck and the darting of his eyes in their thick-lensed gla.s.ses, that he was surrounded by mimics, all wringing their fingers, twisting their faces into masks of agony, and moaning and groaning, driving their timider friends into shuddering lunes of demonic giggling. Professor Klingman clung to Mrs. Phillips' hand, feeling sick at heart with shame and anger, and squeezed his eyes shut, waiting in silence for the intermission. He could not notice, in his misery-or perhaps did not notice because of his eyesight-that a man in the box to the left of the stage was watching all he did with a queer fascination, watching as a scientist might study an insect, never s.h.i.+fting his gaze for an instant toward the stage.

At last (incredibly, from Alfred Klingman's point of view) the intermission did arrive, the houselights came up, and he was able to scramble, or, rather, stagger, to the aisle and up it, toward the exit sign, pus.h.i.+ng through the crowd in a way quite unlike him, apologizing right and left to faces he probably could not see, since he was weeping. He somehow reached the cloakroom and retrieved his hat and coat, then pushed toward the street door. There, however, he found he could go no further because of the violent pounding of his heart. He leaned on the wall, wide-eyed, pink-nosed, clutching his chest as if aware that if he did not calm himself, this excruciating night might be his last.

”Monstrous!” he whispered over and over, probably more loudly than he knew. ”Monstrous! Blasphemous!”

Then, as men will do in such desperate situations, Professor Klingman tried to reason with himself. ”Yet what harm, after all?” he said loudly, his red-lidded eyes squeezed tight shut. ”No doubt an inexpensive, even worthless cello. A harmless little joke. What harm in that?” But his heart, it seems, was thudding more violently now than ever, and, judging from his face, some sorrow vast and plangent as the sea was threatening to drown him. He opened his eyes as would a drunken man to steady himself by the solid lines of furniture and vistas of neatly patterned carpet.

A small, anxious crowd had gathered around him, largely composed of people he knew, fellow regulars, though apparently he couldn't focus any faces. And now one of the crowd moved forward, extending his hands toward him.

”You've had a shock, my good man,” the stranger said kindly, taking hold of the professor's trembling hands. ”Come with me, I beg you. Let me buy you a drink.”

Professor Klingman accepted-being, of course, in no position to resist, though not a drinking man. Little did he know what man he was putting his trust in. Slowly-to the crowd's considerable relief-the two men went through the foyer, the professor leaning on the younger man's arm. They entered the lounge, where the younger man guided Alfred Klingman to a table by the window looking out on a river and park. The night was tranquil, dark except for an occasional streetlamp. On the grounds of the park, which were safer in those days, one could see, here and there, pairs of lovers walking, and over by the golfcourse a woman with a dog. The younger man brought drinks of some kind, then took a chair opposite Alfred Klingman's and sat watching him fixedly, much as he had watched from the box to the left of the stage.

Gradually the professor regained his composure.

”The music disturbed you deeply, I see,” the stranger said.

”I'm afraid so,” Professor Klingman confessed. ”I'm afraid I behaved like a dreadful old fool.” He made an effort to smile, but blushed instead, a slow blush, remarkable on a man so old, that rose to his hatbrim. ”A harmless little joke, harmless little trick on the audience-” He broke off abruptly. His eyes filled with tears which he made no effort to explain, if, indeed, he knew their explanation. He removed his thick-lensed gla.s.ses and wiped them on his handkerchief.

The younger man continued to study him. He was a thin, sallow person of thirty-five or forty, dressed in a black suit with a black waistcoat and black bow tie. His forehead was high and queerly narrow, like the forehead of a horse, and his eyes, which blinked continually, were unnaturally bright and alert, like a chicken's.

”Perhaps the music was not a joke,” the young man said, and smiled in a way that might have been malicious.

Professor Klingman merely looked at him and raised his right hand to his hearing aid.

”Perhaps you alone, in all that fat, complacent audience, understood tonight's music,” the young man said.

”Yes, perhaps,” the professor said tentatively, slowly lowering his hand. He cautiously waited for things to become clearer.

”Let me explain myself,” the young man said. He leaned forward, vaguely aggressive, still rapidly blinking, placing his strikingly long white fingers on each side of his gla.s.s. ”I grew up in a clergyman's family, in a very small town not many miles from here. There reigned in our home a punctilious cleanliness and a pathetic, bookish optimism. We breathed an atmosphere of dusty pulpit rhetoric-large words for good and evil which I have learned to hate, since perhaps they are to blame for all our human sufferings.”

Professor Klingman touched his chin, considering.

”For me,” the young man hurriedly continued, ”life consisted entirely of those grandiose words, since I knew nothing more of it than the infinite, insubstantial emotions they called up in me. From people I expected divine virtue or hair-raising wickedness; from experience either ravis.h.i.+ng loveliness or consummate horror. I was full of avidity for all that existed, and full of a pa.s.sionate, tormented yearning for True Reality, whatever form it might take, intoxicating bliss, undreamt-of anguish.

”I remember my first disillusionment. There was a fire one night in my parents' house. It spread insidiously until the whole first floor was in flames, and soon the stairs would be on fire. It was I who discovered it. I went rus.h.i.+ng through the house shouting, 'Fire! Fire!' I know what emotion underlay those cries, though at the time it may not have come fully alive to my consciousness. 'So this,' I thought, 'is a fire. This is what it's like to have a house on fire. Is this all there is to it?'

”Heaven knows, it was serious enough. The whole house burned down; only with difficulty was the family saved, and I myself got some nasty burns. It would be wrong to say that my fancy could have painted anything much worse than the actual burning of my parents' house. Yet some vague, formless idea of an event that was even more frightful must have existed somewhere within me, by comparison with which the reality seemed flat. This fire was the first great event in my life.

”I need not go on to recount all my various disappointments in detail. Suffice it to say that I zealously fed my magnificent expectations of life with the matter of a thousand books. Ah, how I have learned to hate them, those poets who chalk up grand words on all the walls of life-because they had no power to write them on the sky with penpoints dipped in Vesuvius! I came to think every large word a lie and a mockery.

”Ecstatic poets have said that speech is poor: 'Ah, how poor are words!' they bleat. But no, sir! Speech is rich, extravagantly rich compared with the poverty of actual life. Pain has its limits-physical pain in unconsciousness, mental pain in torpor. The same is true of joy. Our human need for communication has found itself a way to create sounds which lie beyond these limits.

”Is the fault mine? Is it down my spine alone that certain words can run so as to awaken intuitions of sensations which do not exist?”

There was no question now of the malevolence in the young man's smile. But old Alfred Klingman, who'd spent a lifetime teaching the young and outraged, watched him with a look that seemed more bafflement than horror. He may have felt even a touch of admiration for the man's rhetoric.

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