18

I was afraid to sleep that night.

I was afraid of what I might dream. When I did sleep, a little after dawn, I was awakened by the ringing of the telephone. There were many telephone calls, one after another. The answering machine kicked in each time, but I was aware of voices on the speaker, some of the voices familiar, some unknown to me, offering congratulations, offering commissions, urging me to call. The distant-sounding voices were a reminder of the city, the real lives, around me.

As a result of these calls, the following day was a pleasant one. I was on the phone all day, when I was not meeting with someone from the mayor’s office at one of the sunny, flowery restaurants off Civic Center. They wanted to begin work on rebuilding the park immediately, and I had a delightful meeting with a firm of landscape architects in the Bank of America building on California Street.

I forced myself not to think about my visitor of the night before. I warned myself several times: Put her out of your mind.

Often throughout the day a delicious word formed itself on my lips: success.

This was it. This was what I had wanted. Some of the calls I did not respond to, from film producers and the representatives of real-estate developers. Some of these deals would have excited me a few days before. Now I was not interested in drawing up my ideas for a carp garden in Honolulu, or a saguaro fantasy for a retired movie director near Tucson. One or two of the film projects looked exciting, including the sets for a movie about the building of the Eiffel Tower, with a “version of the Tuileries as that area must have appeared back then.”

I tried to reach Nona by phone all day, but she was in a meeting or out to lunch, according to an assortment of receptionists. All morning, and all afternoon, I persisted.

Nona eluded me.

Only in the evening, after supping briefly on a veal with mustard sauce, one of Collie’s best dishes, did I have time to sit for a moment in the studio near my bedroom, and try to gather together my sense of what was happening.

My thoughts were interrupted. I was aware of a familiar laugh downstairs, and aware that Collie was happy to see someone. I was pleased to recognize my brother’s voice, but only when I hurried down the stairs did I fully realize what Collie was saying.

“It’s terrible, the things we have to put up with today,” said Collie. “To see such good people suffering. It’s a terrible thing.”

“Your house looks like a storehouse for phantom furniture,” said Rick.

The sight of Rick silenced me for a moment. Then I managed to sound cheerful. “Things are going to get better. Commissions are starting to come in again. This will all get fixed.”

There was something wrong. Both of us pretended that all was well, and our conversation remained superficially cheerful. “Patient—you’re a patient guy,” Rick was saying. “But look at that armoire, shrouded like that. And look over here. You expect to see a mummy sitting under a chair like this.” He lifted a plastic drape and it settled, stiffly, over the structure it protected, an Empire vintage sedan chair. The slightest spill of plaster dust sifted to the floor.

Rick thanked Collie and said he did not want coffee. He motioned me up the stairs, and when we both sat in my studio I could see clearly what was wrong, and why Collie had been upset. I had been trying to deny it to myself, saying that surely he didn’t look as bad as I thought.

One of his eyes was swollen, the flesh around it blue. His lip had been cut. He withdrew a handkerchief from his pocket. The white cloth was starred with blood. He dabbed at his nose.

“You know what I think, Strater? I think you have about as much money as I have.”

“There’s something you wanted to tell me,” I prompted him. I poured brandy from the decanter in the corner.

He did not respond at once. “Trouble,” he said. He took an inelegantly large swallow of cognac and had to blink his eyes.

“It stings your lip,” I suggested.

He nodded, and yet he took another swallow.

I had endured my concern over my brother by ignoring it, suppressing it, pretending to look the other way. The truth was that I had been, at times, worried about him, finding in Rick the capacity for recklessness that I recognized in myself.

“I might as well hear it now,” I said.

“I had a little difficulty this evening. Nothing overwhelming. Just a little unpleasantness.”

I waited, saying, with my eyes: Tell me.

“First of all, I owe people money,” he said.

“Gambling,” I said.

He made his finger-pistol gesture. “But the problem is: I’ve always owed people money. People let it slide. They know they’ll eventually get their cash.”

“Something has changed.”

Rick studied me for a moment. “Suddenly they want it all back now.”

“How inconvenient,” I said dryly. Then, at once, “I’ll help you if I can, Rick. How much do you need?”

“I can come up with a few dollars. I’ll sell that Miró. I won’t like parting with it. But I’ll buy something to replace it some day. And that odd Cornell, that box that looks like the view out a hotel. That’s worth a lot, and that’s one piece I never really liked. So it’s not the money.”

I spoke for him. “It’s the sudden pressure.”

“The suddenly very vigorous pressure. That’s what has my attention.” He dabbed at his nose. “Do you think about money as much as I do, Strater?”

“Probably.”

A cruel and unfeeling observer would have said that my father was profligate. It was after my father’s death eight years before that my mother began to make grievous mistakes. She had been a woman with a steady gaze and long silences, cool where my father had been jovial, calm where my father had been energetic. Awed by her fine profile, and her way of offering a cheek for me to kiss on arriving and departing, I had loved her without, I was to ultimately understand, really knowing her.

My father’s death destroyed her. Beneath her peaceful smile, which we assumed was a calm sustained by religious or at least philosophical strength, was a deep passion for self-destruction. Within less than a year she had donated extravagantly not only to my father’s favorite charities, but to charities no one had ever heard of before, foundations that sprang up, it seemed, with little purpose but to batten off Fields funds.

It took an effort, even with dwindling resources, to immolate the estate, but by the time I responded, in the midst of my own travels, to a call from the family attorney to the effect that “Mrs. Fields has been secretly and cunningly committing financial suicide,” it was too late. By the time I took a moment from my own career to survey my mother’s circumstances, the family estate was abysmal, and only the fact that Rick and I had inherited some money directly from my father had protected us from losing everything. My brother had, characteristically, spent his money quickly, and his wives had relieved him of what reserves he seemed too busy to consume himself. Stories regarding my brother involved baccarat and thoroughbreds. There were hints of bribes in order to avoid jail after sportscar races or New Year’s celebrations gone awry.

The two of us enjoyed the silence, and then Rick asked the question he had been withholding. “Is there any reason that someone would want to punish you, Strater? Get back at you somehow, I mean?”

“You know who it is.”

His tone was kind, philosophical. “What are we going to do about it?”

“I won’t let them hurt you, Rick.”

He shook his head with a thoughtful smile. Rick was always an active man, all color and energy, a man women liked and men mistrusted. He had confidence, but now something had snapped in his spirit. “We can’t fight these people. Well, we can literally fight them, if and when it comes to that. I did fairly well tonight. But tonight was just a friendly tap on the shoulder. We can’t really fight back. Not in any way that matters.”

“I’ll talk to DeVere.”

“Good idea. What will you say?”

I felt punished, for a moment, by his sarcasm. “I’ll think of something.”

“You shouldn’t have made him mad, Strater. He’ll stay mad. He doesn’t have our forgiving nature.” This was said with more than a dash of irony. Rick had a way of thinking as I thought, physically resembling me but at the same time unlike me, the same coloring but a slightly different mold.

“He won’t hurt you again.”

“I know things about the world that you don’t.” My brother stood and began to pace. “The world is a contest. A long war. You link up with powers, the law, government, organized crime, you name it. But we all need some sort of power behind us. By ourselves, alone—we’re nothing.”

I listened, thoughts and feelings churning.

“So the point I’m trying to make, Strater, is—there’s not a thing you can do.”

I did not answer.

“What weapons do we have? You know how long it takes for lawyers to do anything, and we can’t afford much in the way of representation anyway. The police? They do what the DeVere people want. Sure, they’ll be sympathetic. But months will go by, years will go by. And the people he knows. They have long memories.”

“It’s going to be all right,” I said.

I was a different man now. No more harm would be done to us. I would not let my brother suffer. I would not let myself suffer further indignity. It was all changed now, transformed. I could not fully comprehend how I had achieved this new confidence, but it was real. It would not fade.

I laughed.

Rick was startled, although, even in his anguish, a little pleased to see me so spirited. “This is funny?”

“There is nothing to worry about,” I said. “Everything is different now.”

“There are people who don’t care about human beings, Strater. They aren’t like us.”

“Don’t worry about them.”

“We were raised innocent, like it or not. The world is ruled by violence, and we’ve always tried to finesse it, be polite, get by on charm.”

“They won’t bother us.”

Now Rick laughed, incredulous, hopeful. He could see that I meant it, and he was almost willing to believe that I could do something. “You always take this view of things. You always believe things will be all right.”

“It’s all over. All the gray, dead times are done.” I stood and took him in my arms, and I felt him stir with surprise, because we had never been an affectionate family. And then, slowly, but with feeling, he returned my embrace.

Rick had been my father’s favorite. This had never been talked about, but if my father wanted to read Plato to someone, or if he wanted someone to massage his shoulders, he called Rick in from play to be near him. “The allure of the youngest son,” my mother had called it, and I had wondered if she shared my father’s affection for their younger, more lively offspring.

How could I be sure, I wondered, that my new confidence was not misplaced? My mood might be the afterglow of the award, combined with the memory of a woman who might have been only a reverie, a hallucination.

My brother gambles, I thought.

So do I.

But as soon as he left me I tried to call Nona. She did not have her answering machine connected.

In my disordered mood I watched television briefly, pacing the channels through canned laughter and ads before letting the screen go blank. I paced, tried to reach Nona again, looked through magazines. A recent Wall Street Journal had an article that caught my eye. The article ran beneath a pen-and-ink sketch of DeVere, one of those finely detailed portraits about the size of a thumbprint.

The article described DeVere’s empire as “losing its marketing stamina.” The newspaper detailed a series of disappointing products, sluggish sales, and a failure to “regroup before economic realities.” I hurled the pages away, the large sheafs of newsprint wafting to the floor.

This article was absurd. Everyone knew the extent of DeVere’s power. Men like DeVere and Renman could do anything they wanted.

I stepped outside and across the lawn in the darkness. The conversation with my brother had troubled me deeply. I needed time to think, because on this day everything had been happening so quickly that I could not focus, I could not begin to sort my emotions.

They would not hurt Rick. I would not let them. And yet, as I surveyed the things that I could do I felt a growing feeling of impotence replacing my earlier confidence.

I unlocked the hothouse. I fumbled for the light. I found the switch, and stooped to unravel the hose, its bright brass nozzle draped across a steppingstone.

I straightened.

Disbelief kept me from moving. This was impossible. It couldn’t be true. I had to put my hand out to the potting bench. I could not take a breath. I closed my eyes. I opened them again.

The smell of the place had changed, too, from something fertile to a sour, dead place. The hothouse had been lush and green, the flowers richly colored, the leaves gleaming.

Now each leaf was bleached and limp. The heliconia dangled, pale and withered. My fingers went out to yellow, wrinkled leaves. Stems were slack. Blossoms were brown.

The entire hothouse, every plant, was dead.

I covered my eyes with my hands. I had seen this before, in my botanical studies in Hawaii. The highway department kept certain roads clear by using chemicals strong enough to do this. Someone expert had used a powerful herbicide.

I had to admire his thoroughness.

The feather drifted to the floor, spun, lifted, and wafted upward, in a new direction, toward my outstretched hand. The plume was all colors at once, like the splendor of a hummingbird, white, yes, but then vermilion, then Lincoln green. Radiant alternate colors raced across its filaments as it swung, fluttered, and fell at last upon my fingertips.

Rick, and then my plants. What would be next? When would they get around to Nona? When would someone decide to pay a visit to my mother?

DeVere, I thought.

Stop DeVere.