One

Tattersall’s most embarrassing moment was one for which any newspaper running such a feature would probably have paid the standard fee, but which he himself would gladly have given his life’s savings to have been spared. It was the autumn Homecoming at his college, Chichester. He was attending an afternoon musicale, one of the campus events arranged for the weekend, when he became annoyed by a woman whispering behind him. He turned and glared over his shoulder at her—to find himself looking straight into the eye of an old flame.

He did not immediately recognize her, nor she him. The ghost of Lucy Stiles the undergraduate was a moment in emerging from the fleshed-out cheeks and scrolls of tinted hair in which in the intervening decade it had become, if not obliterated, at least grievously smothered and entangled. Her own mouth opening in an audible gasp when she recognized her censor completed the sensation that was, for Tattersall, like falling through ice into boiling water. A lunatic assortment of expressions crossed his face by way of: surprise (shot-up eyebrows), acknowledgment (bit of a nod), self-deprecation (hunched shoulders and sleazy-rug-merchant spread of hands), and, finally, apology, more or less recorded in the mangled grin with which he turned around again, still mugging.

Such an episode is bound to be especially gruesome at a reunion, where every acquaintance glimpsed is reminder enough of what time has done to all, each face lurking behind the lifted glass or the lowered teacup a threat to what remains of your composure. Tattersall disliked and even feared reunions on that account, but he now taught at Chichester, so there was nothing he could do about it. The reunions came to him. They sought him out as such remorseless personifications of Time that he had come to think of them as the Furies themselves, stalking him from year to year, ready to spring at a moment of their own contriving. He seemed hardly to have exaggerated.

So then Lucy Stiles had become a gilded chatterbox who had to be shushed at concerts, and he a shusher of such women. But he was not! There was not a shred of proof for such a charge, save this fluke of a split second utterly without precedent in his thirty-three years, so utterly unlike him that if Lucy thought she recognized him, very well: he himself did not. He refused to make the identification. Let them adduce fingerprints, dental impressions, cephalic measurements and any other data said to hold up in court, and he would decline to authenticate the result. Let them add to these exhibits a motion picture of the scene just enacted, and he would deny he was its principal. It was the work of the Furies. They had cooked it up with someone masquerading as him, some imp or impostor lurking unsuspected in his veins, biding his time for three decades, genetically instructed to pop from hiding at the moment precisely calculated to do him in, wearing his guise, before as swiftly disappearing from view, never to be seen again, let’s hope.

All this ran through Tattersall’s mind as he sat with his hands digging into his knees, convinced that if his temperature were taken just then with a sickroom thermometer it would be found to be well over a hundred. He believed that mortification ran you a fever. He cursed his luck through gritted teeth. This was not one of those things at which you would laugh six months from now. No, six months from now, six years, you would still, as tonight, draw the pillow across your face and groan.

His hands had begun to enact covert unwitting gestures as, still mugging, he rehearsed the protestation that he did not go about looking daggers at people. This was an exception, a momentary lapse of urbanity—or as the jargon of the hour had it, loss of cool—not even explained by his wanting to hear the music. Far from it! If it was chamber music, it was torture chamber music. The quartet of aliens sawing away up there themselves constituted a public nuisance hard enough to bear without other distractions. Two minutes ago, if queried in an audience reaction poll, he would have said: “I’ll take fingernails run across a blackboard, thank you, or the shriek of automobile tires. Not the cats from whose entrails these sounds are drawn produced in their lifetimes anything like it.” Now he wished this hideous music would never end. Not, at least, till he had worked out some plan of action for the awful confrontation that awaited him the instant that it did.

His nerves were shot anyway. A long and intensifying period of self-review had left Tattersall on edge. A habit of rigorously scrutinizing his conduct and its motives (so that any disclaimer that he ever gave people dirty looks could be taken at face value) had of late entered a new phase. He had always roughly cast these exercises in honesty into words. Now he put the words down on paper. Tattersall had taken to writing himself abusive and even threatening letters. “Dear Tattersall,” this other self would tap out on his office typewriter, this familiar, this Doppelgänger who hovered perpetually overhead like a prosecuting muse, “has it ever occurred to you that this openmindedness on which you pride yourself may very well be the mask for a kind of, oh, lazy malleability, an evasion of elementary Commitment traceable—here we come, boy—throughout your entire life? (And don’t smile at the italics as earmarks of your moral square.) Take for example your habit of ‘conscientiously’ ‘weighing’ both sides of an issue until it is no longer an issue and can be discerningly fingered in the museum of human action known as history. Are you within sight of an opinion about relaxing the rules for women visitors in the men’s dormitories, or are we afraid of being a square here too, perhaps planning a chest cold the day it comes up for vote at the faculty meeting from which we shall therefore be absent …?” Later he would find these letters in the pigeonhole where he got his mail. Proving that, though the unexamined life may not be worth living, the examined one is no bed of roses either.

The abrasive score offered an all too appropriate musical background for the memories that now deluged Tattersall.

He remembered how twelve years before, in a rowboat, on a stream clogged with water lilies, he had undertaken to explain to Lucy Stiles the meaning of the line, “I have seen the eternal Footman hold my coat and snicker,” in Eliot’s Prufrock. “Who is the eternal Footman, Hank?”—trailing a hand among the lilies. “I want to know.”

Oars had had to be tucked up into the boat for the exegesis, and he had thrust his straw hat back an inch with his thumb as he began:

“Well, he’s an, oh, a sort of personification of the force that seems to urge us along even as it ridicules us, don’t you know, Luce. Life egging us ever onward even as it mocks us. Encourages us to keep on making fools of ourselves. Something of that sort.” An apt recollection, wouldn’t you say! He was still smarting under the memory when another brought down its lash. “Your eyes are the soft, gentle brown of these button mushrooms.” Those liberally sprinkling the steaks over which they held hands at Tony’s later.

And now he had just told this woman in pantomime to zip her lip.

These fires the Devil personally stoked. Lucy had sprung into his car one autumn evening wearing a bright blue woolen throw, or shrug, around her shoulders. She had bought it at Garfinckel’s on a recent trip to Washington. She reported having been a half hour deciding from among a selection so beautiful she had wanted them all. By chance he had spent the next weekend in Washington himself, and hotfooted it up to Garfinckel’s. There, sure enough, was a display in the window, with a sign reading: BRIGHTEN YOUR WINTER WITH A GARFINCKEL THROW. He had bought her a red one, over which she had squealed with such delight that he had gone home and written her a poem—The Girl in the Garfinckel Throw. Then to the words he had composed a tune. He sang the song to her, accompanying himself on the piano. “You have your throw, let’s have our fling …” One last twist of the knife: she might very well have a copy of the song around.

What the Transylvanians continued implacably to fiddle was indeed music of the kind we love to hate, and several people walked out in protest. One man’s exit was somewhat diluted by his happening to march up the aisle in step with the rhythms being deplored, swinging his hat in his hand. Tattersall could have taken flight under cover of such a withdrawal. The speculation shot into his mind. But the intrinsic discrepancy of it would have been just too much. Walking out on music you have just shushed somebody so you could hear it would have reduced his position to absolute idiocy. Besides, there would be no end to the mail he was going to get without giving the Doppelgänger an opening like that. The Doppelgänger was already hard at it: “Let’s not pride ourselves too readily on ‘sticking,’ or ‘taking our medicine like a man,’ shall we, when the construction might as easily be put on matters that you hadn’t the guts to flee. You just sat there. The coward has been defined as someone who in an emergency thinks with his feet. What you thought with I shall leave to your no doubt ample …”

The room seemed hot, its occupants to swim together in a mist, like the special effects in the avant-garde film to which they had been treated by the Drama Department the evening before. Tattersall felt a constriction in his chest, as though invisible hands had hitched his trouser belt up around his armpits and were tightening it with commendable stealth. He thought he must be turning purple. A timely heart attack, that’s the ticket. To be sped feet-first out of this mess, and out of all human mortification forever. But no such dramatic salvation was to be vouchsafed him, and the convicts trying to saw their way out of Schönberg went on into their fourth and final movement, marked allegro vivace.

If only he could brazen it out, greet Lucy with a breezy laugh of the kind your unmitigated-gall types brought off with no trouble whatsoever, all over the world. You saw them everywhere, blandly inserting themselves into ticket queues instead of going to the end, butting in ahead of you at supermarket check-out counters without so much as a by-your-leave, and what’s more getting away with it, too. To resemble them in the least Tattersall would have to step away out of character, as in fact he sometimes tried to when up against a situation to which they were vastly more suited. One of his tricks for negotiating a complication for which he was himself miscast was to select some person of his acquaintance whom it was less likely to throw, and pretend to be that person. He did so now. He quickly sorted through a list of eligible candidates for the job of greeting Lucy as though nothing were amiss and came to—Repulski. Of course! At once handsome and hulking, with a kind of loping animal ease, the suave Slav, as he was known around campus, was a natural for this mess. That hovering, half-obvious, chocolate-brown gaze, and that agreeably brassy grin could handle anything. Besides, as head of the Music Department he was in a way responsible for it. The performance of this work during Homecoming could only be explained by the fact that its composer was a friend of Repulski’s. And fond as Tattersall was of music, he was here only out of friendship for Repulski too. So it was no more than fair that Repulski help get him out of it with a whole hide, vicariously speaking.

Having mentally donned Repulski’s guise, then, he hastily tried to imagine a remark of the sort Repulski might be counted on to toss the whole contretemps off with (and given Tattersall’s lack of stomach for frontier-forging twelve-toners). “Well, Lucy, the last time I saw you I believe you were talking about having your ears pierced. Now you won’t have to. Mbahahaha!”

Oh, Christ, no, that’s no good. The familiarity of it would be much too crude; it would be coming on too strong at far too short notice (however typical of Repulski on one level). Something in another vein, hurry. Something more impersonal as far as Lucy herself is concerned, and bearing in mind that slight buzz of an accent he has, though of course not including it in the impersonation. “Well, I thought zot quite an interestink experiment. Having all four musicians play different compositions at vunce.”

He saw that Repulski had been a mistake, and seeing it, felt a spasm of irritation with the man. He could not carry it off, even leaning on his furled umbrella, the ferrule sinking slowly into the wet November sod. The first sally was precisely the kind the mesomorph would have made, which should have told Tattersall this was not up his alley. He would have to see it through himself, and his best bet was to pretend as blithely as possible, as equably as he, himself, could, that nothing was amiss. He had assumed the whisperer behind him to be deprecating the music, and had turned to agree with her. Of course! That must be his line. The scowl had been for the music, not her. They were kindred spirits. Capital! Thank God Sherry wasn’t here. Was Lucy’s husband? What the devil was her married name again? He’d seen it once in an alumni bulletin. Hurlbutt, Halliburton …

Pulling himself together, Tattersall bowed his head as if in prayer, actually to spend the moments remaining to him in mentally rehearsing a few remarks suitable for a greeting predicated on those lines, and in spiritually preparing himself to deliver them. “Gawd,” he would say, rolling his eyes as he wheeled without an instant’s hesitation, on the audience’s arising, “I’m glad that’s over. I know what you were going through. Well, Lucy, I must say the years have been kind to you.”

No, leave the years out of it. They’ll do you no good whatever. Just the pleasantry without the allusion to time. All right. Then the rest would have to be played by ear as, chatting beside her while they drifted slowly toward the exits, he would reconvene the scattered elements of such intelligence and charm as she must be presumed to have seen in him back in the days when, afloat on the gold and green of a Sunday afternoon, he had elucidated Prufrockian unease from such obvious firsthand knowledge.

The composition drew to a close and with it the concert. The audience applauded and rose. Tattersall turned around.

“Well, Hank Tattersall, you haven’t changed a bit.”

Lucy flicked him across the chin with a program rolled into a tube. She smiled under a small blue hat, around whose edges curled the tips of her bronzed hair, remembered as of an auburn persuasion, and hanging to her shoulders and below.

“Well, actually—”

“Not a single bit.”

“You’re looking very well yourself, Lucy.”

“You know Mayo, my niece, of course. I don’t know whether you realized she was my niece. Therefore that I was her aunt.”

The nineteen-year-old Gioconda standing at Lucy’s side was a student in his creative writing class. For all her ethereality, he wanted to wash her typewriter out with soap. It was not for him to say whether the novel on which she was at work showed any substantial talent or not; he only knew that its jolting content and jarring language, taken in conjunction with her genteel New England rearing, put him off, as did the not quite expressionless Mona Lisa gaze with which she heard out his “criticism” in personal conference; so that he jabbered away, fell all over himself in his attempt to seem to know his business while protesting ignorance of the milieu under delineation. What did this child know of junkies and kooks and death warmed over? And by what demon was she driven to write about them in the first-person vernacular? “Write about what you know,” he had said, and for his pains was reminded that she had spent two summers working as a volunteer in a Massachusetts snake pit. She spoke in a hurried whisper, and with a hint of quietly watchful amusement. She always seemed to be smiling secretly, as though she had something on you which qualified the validity of anything else you did or said. What she had on him, along with the rest of the class, was that he believed in something once called esthetic pleasure, and that it was the function of literature to furnish it in some measure, and not to beat you over the head with buzzard guts.

Inching up the aisle between this creature and her aunt, Tattersall had the sense of being caught in a web of female complicity finer than gossamer yet tough as steel, a sacrificial victim, a poor sonofabitch held for a moment in polite suspension before being delivered over to their laughter the minute his back was turned. How would the gossip go? Would his being an old beau make Aunt Lucy go easy on him in instinctive defense of her own taste? Or would it be one of those “to think I nearly married him” things?

“Mayo’s been turning out some bang-up stuff,” he said as they pressed forward in the crowd. He felt as though they were caught in a clogged meat grinder.

“I wish he’d tell me that,” Mayo eagerly whispered.

“She says very good things about you too, Hank,” Lucy said. “She thinks you’re fine.”

“Why don’t we all have a drink and develop the point? God knows we need it after that music,” Tattersall said, beginning to recover his composure.

Such an interval would have a twofold merit. It would delay the women’s own certain klatsch, while giving him the opportunity to recover some more lost ground. After all, chewing the rag was one of the arts at which he was most adept, given reasonable odds.

“Oh, I’m sorry I can’t,” Lucy said. “Harry’s going to speak at this banquet tonight, you know, and I’ll have to see his dinner clothes are in shape, and maybe let him try out his speech on me, and what have you. Are you going?”

“Certainly,” Tattersall said, and, winding up this encounter as gracefully as he could with a hasty, “See you there,” hightailed it across the campus to the Administration Building to find out from program headquarters what and where this banquet was, and try to get tickets. He hated banquets worse than anything on earth, with the possible exception of benefit balls, and caught fleeting glimpses of himself climbing into a boxcar, after one or another, dressed in dinner clothes, and disappearing from the knowledge of men.

He still could not remember her married name. “Water-house, Weyerhauser, Winkleman,” he panted to himself as he galloped across the grass. He was now sure it began with a W. A Calendar of Events tacked to the bulletin board identified both the banquet and the speaker when the name Wurlitzer shot off the page at him. Harry T. Wurlitzer, of course, of the Wurlitzer and Wise advertising agency, was to speak on “Advertising—the Fifth Estate” at a dinner sponsored by the Department of Economics. Reservations were closed, but by pulling some wires Tattersall managed to scrounge up a pair of tickets, after hastily telephoning his wife to make sure she was agreeable to going. “You like to eat out,” he reminded her. Then he galloped homeward through the falling dusk.

Sherry did everything he wanted. She left the cellar, where he had found her coping with a faulty washing machine, and flew effortlessly about the house checking on his clothes as well as her own. She had no problems and no complications. She was a miracle of amenability who gave Tattersall no cause for complaint, except for a sometimes irritating view that the sun rose and set on him. She was a bright finch of a woman without moods, or any lapses of animation save those ordained by fatigue or bad news, which would have been wearing were it not for a certain resilience that went with it, an instinctive recognition that other people’s tempos varied, that their natures periodically called for withdrawal or silence. His report that the speaker was married to an old flame into whom he had just run she took in stride, and made his curiosity her own, while sparing him hers.

Their seats were naturally not very good. They were put at a corner table for ten, of which the other eight were a close-knit group unfamiliar to them and who, happily, paid them no mind. Their discourtesy soothed rather than riled Tattersall’s detestation of banquets. Lucy and Mayo, sitting together, were closer to the speakers’ dais, but by chance visible. Mellowed by a couple of cocktails and some dinner wine, Tattersall led his shimmering little wife over during coffee and presented her. He tried to give the term “classmate” a deliberately jocose connotation when introducing Lucy, by his laugh freely conveying implications of water picnics, of bottles of Chianti slowly consumed, of dormitories entered long after lights-out. “Why we’d …” Here Tattersall, who had drunk his share tonight, made a latticework of his fingers in a manner suggestive of boosting another through an open window in the small hours, glancing in spite of himself at Mayo as he did so. “Your dormitory’s been torn down, Lucy, but the river’s still there.”

“And running downhill like all of us.”

“Swell,” Sherry said, and exemplifying by her manner one of the adjectives which he forbade his students to use, “chipper,” towed him back to their table. Yes, she was chipper. He was married to a chipper woman, he observed as he tripped along in her wake. They resumed their seats in time to hear the president of the Economics Club rapping his water goblet with a spoon. The speeches were about to begin.

Tattersall had correctly picked out Wurlitzer as the broad-shouldered man with the thinning blond hair seated on the toastmaster’s right. His pulse began suddenly to race when Wurlitzer rose to speak. Wurlitzer cleared his throat into his fist, and then grasped the lectern at diagonal corners in the manner of dynamic speakers everywhere. The thick-framed glasses he donned before beginning gave him a look of explosive efficacy even before he opened his mouth.

“The proper study of mankind,” he began, “is still, as it always has been, man. Modern man has carried this injunction farther than all previous generations combined, but all the good it’s done him in the way of peace of mind. The discoveries of psychology, augmented by the illuminations of literature, have left us little to admire in ourselves,” he went on, as the fear gripped Tattersall that he was going to be good. “Self-scrutiny has certainly not conduced to complacency. It’s now reached a point where no self-respecting man has any use for himself.”

Tattersall swallowed dryly as he tried to join in the general laughter, and he clapped with moist palms. Perhaps Wurlitzer had a writer. He seemed to be more glued to his manuscript than a man would have to be who had written it himself …

“Why is all this? I think it’s because our self-concern has become too individual. Literature from Proust and Joyce on to nine out of ten current novels deals with the vertical exploration of interior man rather than his horizontal connection with others—the mankind Pope meant. Fiction is unilateral. Poetry, God knows, is unilateral. Even dancing, the first of the social rituals, is. Young people don’t even touch each other any more on the dance floor. They just bounce around in one another’s general vicinity. We hear a great deal today about the malaise of modern man …”

Yes, Tattersall thought, and so let’s not hear any more about it tonight, shall we? Because I’ll tell you what the malaise of modern man is, Buster. The malaise of modern man is that he’s no goddam better than he ever was, while the slings and arrows haven’t let up none either. But go on. Give us the bit about not communicating. Get to that. It’s after ten.

“Man has isolated himself because of the narcissistic turn his self-concern has taken. Advertising, I fear I must confess, is tarred with the same stick. Am I attractive, am I dainty, fresh all day, graying, carrying enough insurance, well enough groomed, or able to get into this or that club. Well, damn the clubs! What I want to know is, what’s happened to the front porch!”

Swell. Great. Then this citizen was going to be all the ass he could have hoped, and in so doing restore to Tattersall some of his competitive dignity, so sorely damaged. On balance, he would come out looking better by comparison. Lucy mightn’t see it—why should she?—but Mayo would. This speech must certainly be bringing out the Gioconda smile.

“The front porch is gone because we’ve all gone inside and shut the door, there to pursue the first person singular that has replaced the third person plural poets once meant by mankind.” The tie-in with advertising was so predictable that Tattersall wondered how he could possibly have failed to anticipate it. “We don’t really want anything to do with one another any more, and this precisely at a time when mass conformity is the bugbear. With the character in Edna Millay, we love humanity but we hate people.” Yes, he had a writer. He himself would not have known the source of the quotation, which was cropping up everywhere and without credit on the sweatshirts young people were slopping around in. “We don’t want anything to do with one another any more. Houses are no longer built with front porches. There’s the patio instead, in back, and screened from our neighbors the better to sip cocktails in solitude on it, or at best with a few chosen friends. The open, neighborly gemütlichkeit of yesteryear as typified by that institution known as the front porch is gone. The neighborhood is gone! …”

Tattersall stole a glance at Mayo, who was known to slip into New York for weekends in the Village, and was rumored to smoke pot, sending back his own counterpart of the Gioconda smile: a deadpan telegraph to kinship no more in need of actual facial expression than of words. Overt amusement here was out: humor itself barred it. Taste did not smack its lips. It knew instinctively what was not fair game. Sensing all this, Tattersall leaned back to enjoy in a relaxed manner the half-hour of banality that lay ahead.

The result was to overmellow him, and thus lay him open once more to disaster.

The wish to square himself with Lucy had made him get over to the dinner, and it now motivated the close, even fulsome attention he paid her husband. He laughed at all his jokes, and in the serious portions hung on every word, sometimes going so far as to give curt nods of agreement, as if by way of silent “Bravos!”, always trusting that Lucy took note, though careful not to glance in her direction to see that she did, content that she could see him. Once in a while Wurlitzer gave cause for alarm, threatening again to be good, but the danger swiftly passed. This was a good bad speech, not a bad good one. “I think you found a better assortment of individuals on that front porch where nobody cared about status than you do now on that pernickety patio designed to make us see as little as possible of the neighbors we do our damnedest to be as much as possible like!” There was another burst of applause here in which Tattersall gratefully joined. He continued to be big about it all by sitting spellbound through the peroration.

“The kind of man who truly respects his neighbor will stand up to him when the occasion arises, and will let his neighbor see that he gives him the same right. We are now talking about pride, not vanity; character, not personality; individuality, not ego. And I say to you,” Wurlitzer went on, wagging a finger in the air, “that no man is worthy of the name, either personally or professionally, who has not at one time gambled everything, or will not when the need arises gamble everything—but everything—on what he knows to be right. Who has not the guts to go for broke on the win-or-lose, red-or-black spin of the wheel of fortune if that commitment is called for. Beware of safety, beware of security—and hang your ‘image.’”

Just then there was a slight disturbance down the line of tables to Tattersall’s right—a clatter of dishes and a buzz of voices. He leaned forward, and craning his neck to look past the rows of intervening guests, sent a scowl in the direction of the offenders. “Shhh!” he even said. He then did glance over toward Lucy, but she had apparently not noticed either the commotion or the action taken on her husband’s behalf to quell it. Only Mayo did, and she lowered her eyes into her lap and smiled.