4

A COUPLE of years ago I got talked into attending the premiere of a movie in which the lost daughter, leaving St. Louis for Hollywood to make her debut in dirty pictures, was named Flora del Presto. This kind of overt nominal symbolism we now find offensive since it fell out of fashion shortly after the publication of The Faerie Queene. But the first girl I ever knew and loved was named Faith. I didn’t make that up. That was just her name.

Faith and I were preschool painters. Our parents drove us to studio openings, gallery shows, museum exhibits; bought us oversized, overpriced art books and triple overstock in paint supplies: chemically treated rice paper for work in watercolor, palettes round and rectangular, tubes of tempera, tiny brushes for oil touch-ups, high wooden easels, charcoal pencils, pure white smocks, sketch pads.

We took these sketch pads everywhere we went, painted what we saw, and immediately exchanged pages so we knew what we’d seen. We mailed purple finger paintings to each other. After school at her house, we’d eat cookies her mother made for us and do still lifes of the bowl of fruit on the dining room table, the bottles of liquor in the den cabinet. She was much better than I was; it would have been impossible to be much worse. When she won a newspaper contest by drawing a likeness of Abraham Lincoln better than any six-year-old in Los Angeles County, she used part of the prize money to buy me a paint-by-numbers set, which I nevertheless accepted with appreciation because it came straight from her heart.

Father had been offered a job as public relations director for the Jewish Welfare Fund of San Francisco, and Mother had convinced The Nation she’d be able to carry out her duties as West Coast correspondent just as well, perhaps even better, in Northern California, so we were moving to the Bay Area. Faith knew I was leaving—she kept painting pictures of cable cars on the Golden Gate Bridge to help herself imagine what my new neighborhood would be like—but I had put off telling her goodbye until the actual day of departure. Father parked across the street from her house and told me to run in and out real quick with my rolled-up painting because he wanted to be well on the way north before the five o’clock rush.

Faith’s mother told me she was at work in her studio and wasn’t to be disturbed, but I banged on the garage door and told her who had come to visit. Her hands and lower arms were covered with various colors, her hair was pulled back, and she was wearing jeans and a white smock, so she didn’t look her best, but I could have watched her forever as she glided around the garage, mixing paints. She’d thrown a sheet over the front of the easel. Brandishing my painting like a baton, intimating a trade, I asked if I could take a peek.

“No,” she said.

“What are you working on?” I asked.

“Nothing. Just a little landscape.”

I took a deep breath, concentrated on the cobwebs in the corner, and said, “I came to say goodbye.”

“You’re really going?”

“Yes,” I said.

“Really, really going, forever and ever?” “Yes.”

She threw up her hands, splattering paint on my traveling pants, and said, “Well, goodbye.”

I couldn’t take much more of this without volunteering to be her life-long apprentice. I said goodbye and turned to go, but she wrapped her purple-green arms around my neck, kissed my cheek, and said, “I love you, Jeremy.”

“I’ll miss you so much.”

“I really, truly love you with all my soul,” she said.

“My Dad’s waiting. I better go.”

She took her arms off me and stepped back, straightened her smock. Then she said, “I’ve already told you I love you, Jeremy. Can’t you say, ‘I love you, Faith’?”

“I love you,” I said.

“‘I love you, Faith,’” she insisted.

This little scene in the garage occurred only a few months after my futile attempt to say Philadelphia in the living room. Stutterers have a tendency to generalize their fear of one word that begins with a particular sound to a fear of all words that begin with the same sound. In the space of the summer I’d effectively eliminated every F from my vocabulary, with the exception of the preposition, “for,” which for the time being was too small to incite terror. A few weeks later, my fear of F ended when another letter—I think it was L—suddenly loomed large. But at that moment, early October 1962, in Faith’s garage, I was terrified of Fs. I simply wasn’t saying them. I hadn’t called Faith by her first name for nearly a month and had, instead, taken to calling her Carlisle, as if her patronymic had become a term of jocular endearment.

“I can’t,” I said. “I can’t say that.”

And by way of explanation I took the rubber band off my painting and unfurled a Crayola crayon effort of a cowboy on a horse that looked more like a dog. This was figure. Ground was short green grass, pool-blue sky, burgundy mountains. Between the cowboy on his dog-horse and the short green grass, pool-blue sky, and burgundy mountains was a barbed wire fence because between me and life that can be touched there has always been a fence.

Talented as she was, Faith wasn’t exactly Walter Pater when it came to other people’s paintings. She didn’t understand. She took my inability to say her name as an admission of insincerity. Maybe she thought I had some hot new watercolorist stashed away in Encino. She didn’t even give me time to explain. She lifted the sheet over the easel, revealing a beautiful if unfinished self-portrait—it promised to be her best work yet—that she crumpled into a ball and shoved into my hands before running into the house with tears streaming down her face. I meant to run after her and explain everything, but I saw her mother lock the back door. Then I heard Father start honking the car. Like a dead man down a plank, I walked the driveway to our car, vowing to write Faith a full confession once we left Los Angeles.

The letter, of course, never got written. An hour out of L.A. I fell asleep and started dreaming about the girls up north. Frustrated artists, young lovers are like that: they have traitorous imaginations. We took the coastal route, the slower, prettier way, since Beth and I wanted to watch the waves and neither Mother nor Father was in any particular hurry to arrive in Northern California. They weren’t sure they were doing the right thing, leaving behind good friends to take interesting jobs, and their uncertainty took the form of a sustained elegy to Los Angeles. Suddenly the Hollywood Bowl was “a lovely place to listen to piano,” the Los Angeles Times was a “daily addiction,” and Frank Tang’s, where Father had once launched an entire dish of sweet and sour spare ribs into Mother’s lap, was “the only Chinese restaurant anywhere that left you feeling full.”

Their combined nostalgia grew so great, in fact, that halfway up the coast Father pulled the Rambler—a 1958 Rambler, one of the worst cars ever made—into a motel, where Beth and I swam in the heated pool and my parents tried to talk themselves out of heading back. Many years later Father, edging into another depression, wrote the Ellenboegens: “While I can’t rewind the clock and there’s little to be gained except anguish and soul-twisting remorse, I wish to Christ we’d never come up here in October of ’62. Saddest move I ever made. Most regrettable. It’s not in the stars but in us, said the man. There it is. I said how I feel and now we go from here. Upward, I hope. Onward. We must.” Why the Ellenboegens found it necessary to take time out from Fire Wheel to show me this letter when I moved back to L.A. I’ve never quite comprehended, but in October 1962 a house had already been bought, the furniture had already been moved: we would continue north. Out of such slight considerations, lives are made.

At noon the next day we stopped thirty miles south of San Francisco to eat lunch at San Gregorio Beach, which is now a nudist colony but then was only a long stretch of gray shore. Although the beach was packed with people, no one surfed or swam. No one constructed even a sand castle. For as far as I could see in either direction, they were huddled together on towels and blankets, listening to the third and final game of the National League playoff between the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants. The tinny reecho of a thousand transistor radios held in the hands of Giant fans: this was strange enough. Something else was wrong. The sky was ugly, the food was bad, the sea was green. Then I realized what was the matter. They were all tuned to the wrong station. They weren’t listening to Vin Scully.

Vin Scully knows baseball about as well as it is possible or desirable to know any game. He is always fair, even complimentary, to the opposing team. And he has a voice that must have been a gift from the gods. I used to lie in bed with the radio beneath the pillow and earplugs on and listen to him talk until midnight. It was the clearest, most uncluttered sound I’ve ever heard, that man’s voice, and it would enter my ears, absolve my body of all its burdens, massaging my troubled mind.

Russ Hodges, on the other hand, was shamelessly partisan in his approach and talked as if he were short, fat, and smoked smelly cigars, all of which he was or did. His one contribution to baseball was the absurd ejaculation, “Bye-Bye, Baby!” whenever the Giants hit a home run. In postgame interviews he’d always say, “Well, Willie, how did it feel to drop that pop fly with two out and the bases loaded in the twelfth inning?” Willie would always say, “That’s right, Lon.”

I asked Father to turn our radio to the right station, but he said, “We’re in San Francisco now. We can only get San Francisco stations.”

I ran into the water and started swimming back to Malibu, back to Faith if she’d have me, but Father jumped in and pulled me out. A great roar went up from the crowd. I thought they were cheering Father’s heroism. They weren’t. The Giants, trailing 42 at the end of eight innings, had scored four runs in the top of the ninth to win.