“Tell me about your play,” she said. “Am I in it?”
“Someone like you is in it, but it isn’t you.”
“But I could play the role.”
“You could if I cast you.”
“Of course you’ll cast me.”
“Maybe you won’t want this role.”
“If you wrote it I want it.”
“That’s your only interest, a role. You don’t even know what the play is about.”
“What is it about?”
“It’s about a marriage that fails and the partners stay together but take lovers, not very original. Then the husband is caught with his mistress in a love nest, there’s a shooting and two die. The husband is shot but doesn’t die. People wish he had. He is condemned as a lecherous cad by priests, newspaper editors, and other custodians of the high moral ground. His son abandons college to escape his father’s scandal. Thoughtless of the father not to perish from shame. To spite others, the man lives on. His life grows bleak. He can’t understand why this tragedy happened, why people died. It’s a mystery. He begins a journal, fills ledgers with ruminations, theories, then decides writing a play will combat the lethal determinism of the universe. He fills his imagined stage with a riot of scenes that synthesize events, discover answers. He discovers little and falls depressed at the pointlessness of wild endeavor. In time he humbleheartedly reunites with his estranged wife as a way of saving his soul. Magnanimous woman, she doesn’t loathe him. She has her own sorrows. She has always loved him and he her. This is such a commonplace story. It happens to everybody, don’t you think? Finally, as he’s framing a conclusion on the cause of the killings, he turns up facts that dramatically contradict his conclusion, so he visits his old paramour to confront her with the news. That’s as far as I’ve gotten.”
“When he goes back to his wife, do they make love?”
“I haven’t decided if love is what they make.”
“But they do sexual things.”
“I haven’t decided if what they do is sexual.”
“You’ve forgotten what’s sexual.”
“Not at all.”
“Do you remember me making myself sexual in this hammock?”
“I do.”
“Shall I do it again?”
She was nuding herself belowskirts. She could do this expeditiously.
“Is anybody watching?”
“I am.”
“I mean others.”
“No.”
“Is anybody coming?”
“No.”
“You see how I still love you?”
“I see the contour of a sunrise.”
“Shall we go to the room?”
“If you like.”
“You’re not enticed.”
“I seem to be.”
“Then say it.”
“The room. Yes.”
We went to her rustic chamber: bed, dresser, commode, basin and pitcher, wallpaper with pink roses on a field of mattress ticking. We shed our garments and I remembered vividly what I felt whenever I took this journey; but I felt none of that now, could not invest my movement with the pelvic arrhythmia she would remember, if she could differentiate mine from others. She perceived the problem and initiated variations on the theme, but while I remained full-blooded, I did so with ice in my heart.
“You’re like a hanged man,” she said. “Erect but dead.”
“I am a hanged man. At the end of my rope.”
“You don’t look dead. You look wonderful. You look like the man I fell in love with at your dinner party.”
“That man is dead. Did you fall in love with your director? And what would he say if he saw you now?”
She was, just then, a moving picture, stirring the air with my verticality as if it were the tiller of a boat in a rowdy sea. My question becalmed her.
“Ah, you’re jealous. How silly.”
She always viewed my objection to her flirtations as the fettering of her soul.
“He knows about us,” she said, “but he assumes we’re a thing of the past.”
“Would this scene convince him otherwise?”
“He’s not important to me the way you are, and he’s not very good at this.” She jostled the tiller. “I told him we had a legal matter to discuss.”
“And so we do.”
“Not now.”
She went to the dresser and found a long strand of pearls, put it around her neck and knotted it so the knot lay in the deep fallaway of her breasts. She straddled the tiller and let the pearls caress my chest, my face.
“Those look like Felicity’s pearls,” I said, and she reacted as if I’d lashed her with a bullwhip.
“Why would you say such a thing?” She knelt up straight, then put one foot on the floor, so beautiful in her angularity, her pudendal equipoise. “You think I stole them?”
“Cully Watson says he didn’t take them, yet they did vanish. Odd he admits the money but denies the pearls.”
“Maybe the police stole them. What do I care? How could you think I took them?”
“I never saw you wear pearls like these before.”
“I loved Felicity’s pearls, so I got my own.”
“Saved your pennies, did you? Giles paid five thousand dollars for Felicity’s.”
“Mine were a gift from an extremely wealthy gentleman. You’re being rotten.”
“Cully contradicts everything you and Felicity told me.”
“Cully!” she screamed. “I’m sick of Cully. He’s a murderer. You take his word over mine?”
“Have you seen his statement?”
“Yes, and he’s a maniac. It’s all lies. all lies! all lies!”
She was kneeling on a pillow. She stood up, grabbed the pillow, and threw it at me.
“You son of a bitch, you believe him, don’t you! You think I had sex with him! You think I was in the bathtub with Felicity! YOU’RE A MANIAC TOO IF YOU BELIEVE THAT!”
She threw a box of body powder at me. It missed my head, hit the wall, and showered talcum over the bedclothes. She reached for the toilet water but I wrapped her fury in a bear hug and made her put it down.
“That cape Felicity wore,” I said. “I found the costumier where you bought it. I saw a similar cloak in his display window. He remembered you.”
Her body went limp in my arms. I eased her backward so she could sit on the bed, and she blanched, summoning a stroke, or the black plague, anything to solve this crisis of contradiction. She buried her face in her hands as she had when she wept for the dead horse on the Fourth of July.
“You don’t know anything,” she said.
“I agree with that. Why don’t you enlighten me?”
She fell backward on the bed and stretched her arms over her head, eyes closed, her cave of opulent nuances assisting her in negotiating a new reality.
“I gave Felicity the mask and cloak to wear for you.”
“For me?”
“She wanted you. Wanted to be with you.”
“Felicity wanted me?”
“For years. She could never tell you.”
“Did it occur to her I might not want her?”
“You’d have wanted her if you saw her in that cloak.”
“I did see her in it. Alive and dead.”
“She had a beautiful body and she wanted to give it to you. I thought you’d like that. I said I’d arrange it. We made a game of how we’d both dress up for you.”
“You never mentioned such a thing.”
“It was new. We talked about it the week before. We wanted to surprise you.”
“But Cully was the surprise.”
“Yes.”
“And he, not I, put you both in the tub.”
“NEVER!”
She fumed in silence, stoking herself for an explosion of logic that would defy all argument. I pacified her with gin and in the ensuing half hour she cobbled together her story.