THE MOMENT WAS TO stand out forever in her memory. There she stood, alone and naked, thinking of nothing except the minutiae of the bath, toweling herself dry, gazing idly about the warm steamy room, then at her image in the long panel of mirror in the closed door.
Her breasts looked fuller. She had gained no weight, but her breasts, always small, looked fuller. Below her navel, there was the faintest globe of fullness too.
She stood motionless, staring. Had the years of longing fused into some betraying lens of illusion? Or could it be at last the moment she had imagined so many thousand times?
She stepped closer to the mirror, looking away for an instant, then suddenly back to her image as if to trap something before it could escape. The same impression, of a most hesitant distension, tentative, a curving outward thrice over.
Oh God let it be true.
She stood, searching the glass. She saw the tight-muscled body of a girl, but she was forty. She saw the lifting spheres of a virgin’s breasts but she had been married and divorced. She had never remarried and if this were true—oh let it be true.
She moved a step closer to the mirror but this time she looked only at her face, her eyes, too eager now to be her ordinary brown eyes, at her mouth, compressed now as if to clamp down on any word of pleading, and therefore not her ordinary mouth either. Then swiftly she looked again at her body and suddenly laughed aloud, as a child laughs.
She flung her arms wide and the towel billowed out behind her like a sail caught by a gusty wind.
Don’t. It’ll probably be all over by morning.
She let the towel drop and went to her telephone. It was late afternoon and Dr. Jesskin would not be there, but his two nurses knew her and when she said, “This is Theodora Gray, could I possibly see the doctor tomorrow morning?” she was given an appointment at nine thirty.
“I’m working you in,” Miss Mack said, “so if you could get here a few minutes ahead?”
“Of course I will. And thanks.”
She held on to the crossbar of the telephone after she had put it into its cradle, gripping it as if at a lever to propel herself into action. What she wanted to do was lie still, silent, commanding her mind not to leap ahead, yet yielding to her mind’s rebellion, and for a while go on regarding this possibility as if it were already fact.
But it was nearly six and she was being called for in half an hour, for dinner and then a concert. She had been looking forward to the evening with eagerness, that special insistent eagerness that came from extended periods of loneliness. Loneliness came only at long intervals, but then it lasted a long interval too, like the changing of the seasons, never sudden, never over in a day or a week. There was a foreboding first, of the advent of another spell, like the lowering of a sky as the barometer drops and the winds gather, and then when the sun went, there was the knowledge that the bleak darkness would remain and remain and remain.
She hid these bad times, with success now, unlike the first year after her divorce when she could not possibly have fooled anybody, but the effort was still depleting and destructive and she always emerged as if from an illness, unsure of herself, except for her work, wary, yet eager for new people, for all people. Friendships that she had let lapse were picked up again, and new friendships welcomed with a readiness she for one knew was excessive.
She had accepted a date for the concert from a man she scarcely knew—had that alacrity seemed excessive? She had met him only the week before, at Celia’s, and because it was there, it was easy to get talking about music; she had thought he might be involved professionally with music as Celia and Marshall Duke were, but he turned out to be a lawyer. His name was Matthew Poole; he called himself Matthew, not Matt. She liked the name that way, uncondensed. Her own name uncondensed was pretentious; Dori made it usable.
She still signed her pieces Theodora V. Gray, and though she was not one of the big names in the newspaper world, there was enough value in her by-line to make it foolish to consider changing it. Dori Gray in print would look cozy or cute or chic like Suzy Knickerbocker and her special pieces were not even remotely related to the cute or chic nonsense so many editors parceled off as the special province of their women writers. She had never considered going back to her maiden name (“I’ll decide what to do about my name when I marry again”) and by the time she began to see that she wasn’t one of those women who remarry easily after a divorce, so much equity had been put into the name Gray by her own effort that she felt she had earned her own title to it.
“Haven’t I just read something of yours?” Matthew Poole had asked when Celia introduced them. “In a magazine?”
“The Spock piece. I don’t often do anything political.”
“That’s the one.” Suddenly he added, “ ‘Dr. Spock Brings Us Up Short.’”
“You remembered the title.”
“Half my cases right now are conscientious objectors.”
“Oh good.”
She always felt drawn to, and safer with, people who were what was so scornfully called “liberal” these days by the extreme left. She was used to the scorn of the extreme right, but this new scorn was harsher. She had never been very good at talking politics; she got furious at the camouflaged racists who were such devotees of law and order, and at the black-power toughs who talked so glibly about shooting whitey, and at the doctrinaire Communists who went livid over free speech in New York or Washington but remained sublimely untroubled by jailing or shooting of dissenters in Havana or Moscow or Peking.
Matthew Poole had shown himself more controlled when they had talked of these things. It was odd that she could remember this part of their talk that day at Celia’s but not how they had got around to the concert. She was glad he was a lawyer and not a writer or editor or newspaperman. She always liked meeting people not connected, however tangentially, with deadlines and early editions and newsbreaks. The Press—capital T, capital P—was an ingrown world where you were too close too often to the same people, covering the same stories, eating in the same restaurants near the paper, falling in love with the same men in a kind of inky incestuous turn and turn-about. She had from the first made it a point never to get involved with any of them; not once until last year, during the endless newspaper strike that had finally killed off her paper and made her for months, as Dick had said, “a press orphan”—
For the first time since the mirror she thought of Dick. Dick Towson. If this were true, what would Dick do? How would he take it, what would he say, what would he feel? They had been drifting apart, without rebuke and without misery, amiable toward each other as they had been before he left on his assignment in Vietnam, and though she had felt the same apprehension anybody would feel about his going into the danger of battle-reporting, she had almost welcomed the trip, as he probably also had, as a most tactful Finis to their dwindling affair.
“By Dick Towson.” It was a by-line known in dozens of newspapers the country over, the by-line of a first-rate reporter with a brisk, vivid style. If it was by Dick Towson, it would never be dull.
She glanced toward the open door of the bathroom, the blank mirror now reflecting only the edge of the tub and a strip of flowered wallpaper above it.
Unexpectedly she laughed again. If it were true, it would be “by Dick Towson.”
On her dresser a small clock chinked six times and she jumped up, reaching for her underthings. As she drew her thin girdle up over her knees she suddenly stopped and, hobbled as she was, crossed the room to her low dresser. The beveled glass cut her off at mid-thigh, but above, embedded within the jut of her hipbones, was again that tentative orbing.
The concert turned into background music for her thinking, which meant that as a concert it was a failure. Usually she listened to music as she read a book, note for note, as it was word for word on a page, skipping nothing, her mind never wandering. But tonight there was no stillness in her for listening, nothing passive and receiving, though it was good to be there and good to be there with Matthew Poole.
At dinner he had talked of himself and his family for the first time, of his two teen-age children, Hildy and Johnny, whom he spoke of with a pleased satisfaction as if they were good children to have, and of his wife Joan, elliptically and briefly as if there were some disaster there that had best go untold. And then he had turned the talk to her, putting the inevitable questions, not trying to sound casual as he did so, not trying to disguise them as small talk.
“I know you’re divorced,” he had said. “But I didn’t want to ask around about whether you’re tied up emotionally as of now, or reasonably uninvolved.”
She was glad he hadn’t tried to make it sound offhand. This sort of question never was. But what a time for it! What a time for her to get interested in somebody new. Sitting here, watching the baton, focusing on it as if its tip were the one solid point in a light swarm of fever and unreality, she half wished he hadn’t been at Celia’s last week. What a time! Tomorrow morning would be only the first step, a quick examination and then waiting for the lab reports. But she would be saying the words aloud to Dr. Jesskin, not just hearing them in her own mind, but really saying them out into the air: I think I am pregnant.
“Reasonably uninvolved,” she had answered Matthew at the table, and had gone on to say too much about herself, about how she seemed to go through awfully long stretches of uninvolved, like some vexing stubborn anemia, how irritated she was at times to be making so little use of her so-called freedom, how she sometimes swore she was going to turn promiscuous and have affair after affair after affair.
“But?”
She could still hear his amused “but.” Now she glanced at him quickly and then back to the orchestra. He was absorbed in his listening, eyelids half lowered though not music-lover shut, his whole look one of repose and pleasure. She understood that; but tonight, for her, was something new. She tried again to listen as she always listened but the phrase “I think I am pregnant” went on repeating itself, a soft pedal-point against which the flow of sound went streaming by, rhythmic, mobile and somehow kind.
In the morning she was ten minutes early and the first patient had not yet arrived. “Then I might as well sneak you in ahead,” Miss Mack said, as if she understood very well that this was no routine visit, no dutiful checkup. She opened the office door, said to the doctor, “Since Mrs. Reeves is late again,” and withdrew instantly. She always remained in the examining room, with an obviousness that had always amused Dori. As if without this starchy and omnipresent chaperon no female patient could feel safe in the presence of Dr. Cornelius Jesskin. He was already preoccupied as she entered his office, reading his own notations in the folder opened and spread before him on his desk. She recognized it without looking at its slightly worn tab that would say Mrs. A. Gray, with the A crossed out and a T written in above it. Its last entries were over two years old; she had even been neglecting the annual Pap test.
The doctor had motioned her to the chair beside him and she waited until he looked up at last from his notes. Then in a rush she said, “Oh, Dr. Jesskin, it seems to me, yesterday I was having a bath and I—I think I may be pregnant. I think my breasts are a little different, and I began to think—I realized I might have skipped a period again. Do you remember when I began to be irregular about my periods? And then—”
“Just a moment,” he said. “Suppose you start at the beginning, and tell me.” He was looking at her carefully and she thought, He has to stay neutral, and then, making herself speak slowly, sounding almost docile, she began her recital once more.
He fingered the pen in his hand as he listened, not using it to jot down any note of what she said. His face wore no expression except his usual one of concerned interest, an intentness that shut out every other importance in the world except the one importance brought in by his patient. When Dori ended, he said, “I’ll have a look at you soon, but tell me again when your skipped period, if you did skip, when it should have started.”
He began to write and she gave him dates but again broke off and spoke in a rush. “Don’t you remember the first time I skipped? You said it wasn’t usual at that age, but that it did happen, and might again.”
He searched his notes. “That would have been about when?”
“Two years ago. I was thirty-eight. In the spring, April.”
He was nodding now, reading his minute, perfectly legible writing. She had gone to him then only because she was trained to go to doctors when the inexplicable showed itself, and it was inexplicable enough at thirty-eight to have no period for five weeks. “Early menopause,” she had joked to herself, but might it not be some symptom of—of what? A tumor, a cyst, the first fearful sign of malignancy. You didn’t ignore it; you went to your doctor and faced it fast. That time there had been not even a stir of hope that it might be this; it had been one of the interminable stretches of total doneness.
“Yes,” Dr. Jesskin said, looking up from the folder. “You then returned to being regular. ‘More or less’ is the way you put it. You reported in by phone for four periods, then stopped calling in.”
Suddenly tense she said, “You aren’t going to tell me this may be just another skipped period?”
“I am not going to tell you anything as yet, Mrs. Gray. After I examine you, we will arrange for laboratory reports. But even before that, I think I should remind you of something you already know—we must remember it now—the possibility of pseudopregnancy. We see it, not very often, but enough to have to consider it. The menstrual break, the swelling of the breasts, even engorgement of the uterus. You know of such cases, do you not?”
Like a thin coating of sleet, his speech constricted and chilled her. “You told me, that other time.”
He tapped the old-fashioned buzzer beside the phone and at once Miss Mack appeared.
“Mrs. Reeves is here now,” she said.
“I’ll see Mrs. Gray first.”
Miss Mack ushered Dori into the examining room and indicated the curtained alcove where she was to undress. “He never likes it when patients are late,” Miss Mack said fussily, “and this one always is. He wants to teach her a lesson.”
That’s not why, Dori thought. He also wonders if it could be true. She stripped quickly, not hearing Miss Mack’s friendly babble, and then stepped back into the examining room. Again the table, she thought, again the stirrups, again the sheets draped so carefully over your raised knees as if it were immodest to let a gynecologist see your knees or thighs but sobriety itself to open the core of your body to him. The idiocy of the rules. Miss Mack always staying right through, just to be there.
Her heart began to pound. It was a new sensation, disagreeable and heavy. I’m afraid, she thought. Through the closed door she could hear the doctor speaking, on the telephone probably, leisurely, contained, the same Dr. Jesskin he always was. Suddenly she remembered her very first visit to a gynecologist, long before she had heard of Dr. Jesskin. She was afraid then too, but in a different way, the orthodox way. She was twenty-two, then, and she and Tony had just been married. Less than two months later, she missed her period. She was stupefied with unwillingness, with unreadiness. They hadn’t even talked of children except as a vague possibility in the future; she was not ready to stop being a girl, to stop being the young bride, the girl reporter on the paper. When she was certain she was pregnant, she told Tony. He was unwilling, too. “We could stop it,” he said. Filled with relief, she cried, “Oh, let’s, till next year.”
And next year had flown, and another and another and by the time she had sought out Dr. Jesskin, a specialist in sterility problems, had told him her history, she had faltered, “So you see I’m not sterile, Doctor, I’m not barren, I mean I wasn’t, but this is the sixth year of our marriage and we’ve begun to be terribly afraid we can’t ever have children.”
She was not sterile. She was not barren. She had been injured by the abortion, Dr. Jesskin’s examinations and tests had finally revealed, the slow tests, the careful tests, some painful, like insufflation to see if the Fallopian tubes were blocked or still open, others routine. She had been too harshly curetted; now she could not sustain a pregnancy. “I might be getting pregnant every month,” she had explained to Tony, “but the ovum can’t get embedded—it’s like clinging to a wall of paper.”
But this was reparable, the doctor had said, this damage that need never have happened, though the repairing would be slow, and progress for a long time indiscernible and unprovable. “You will bear a child someday, I think,” Dr. Jesskin had said, and she had trusted him and had been faithful with her visits, never missing one for two full years, sharing in his patience, sharing in his confidence when he said at last, “Don’t count on this, Mrs. Gray, but this might be your year, it might be. The uterine lining is getting back to normal.”
But before another week of that year was out, Tony was gone and everything they had tried for was gone too. Later—she couldn’t remember how much later—she had gone to Dr. Jesskin once again, and told him of her divorce. She promised to resume her treatments soon, knowing that if she stopped for good there would be retrogression, a loss of everything gained these two full years, a defeat forever. But even as she spoke, she wept uncontrollably, and Dr. Jesskin had counseled her not to commit herself as yet to any program, that shock and grief in themselves were often enough to upset all the body’s Chemistries and powers.
“But if I stop, I’ll have lost my last chance.”
She had made one appointment but when the day came she could not bear the going, could not stand the continuing of a purpose which now was off in the distance of “when you marry again.” To marry at thirty was not as easy as it had been at twenty-two; her needs had taken on shape and firmness; she could no longer live in a vague happy cloud of girlish responses to a man because he danced well or because he took you to all the smart places. And by thirty-five, by forty—
Suddenly Dr. Jesskin opened his office door behind her. She lay inert; unafraid; simply waiting. Miss Mack reappeared, offered him a small tray with instruments and the examination began. It proceeded in complete silence, as always in the past, and as always, Dr. Jesskin’s expression was one of total absorption. When the examination was over, he asked Dori to sit up at the side of the table, her legs dangling, and Miss Mack quickly rearranged her drapings, over her shoulders, scooped low over her navel, revealing only her breasts. As the doctor began the careful palping and prodding, Dori thought wildly, It’s like the annual check for cancer—he never says anything then either.
“Would you please stand now?”
She slid off the table, with Miss Mack swiftly re-draping her once more, this time leaving her torso bare, but gathering the white folds tightly around her hips into a bunched rosette for Dori to clutch to herself, an elaborate and coiled fig leaf.
It’s so stupid, she thought; why can’t I just be naked? The words were angry, but she could not have said them aloud. Dr. Jesskin was looking at her in profile, below her navel, up to her breasts, below again, and then he moved around to see her full on.
On his face was that familiar expression, absorption, nothing else. “When you are dressed,” he finally said, “I will see you again in the office.” He nodded, almost formally, and she hurried to the alcove and into her clothes. As she knocked and opened his office door a few minutes later, he dropped his pen on the page before him—it was still her folder—and said, “Well, my dear girl,” and before she could interpret the words or the half-permissive tone of them, he added, “there is no way to be sure, as I said, until the tests are complete.” She sat down, silent. “But it does seem, there is some slight evidence of change.” Before she could speak, he raised his index finger an inch or two, a polite, cautionary inch or two, in renewal of what he had asked her to remember. “Some slight change, not only the apparent enlargement which you reported, but also perhaps a change in the cervix. It is out of the question to be certain, so early, but a change suggests itself, I must say.”
“There is at least a possibility that I’m pregnant?”
“I must not answer in any way until the reports are in. I’ll have the Drav Index done, which is faster, but also the A-Z test, totally conclusive.”
“How long do they take? Could you tell them to hurry?”
“They always hurry, on pregnancy tests.” He stood up and she did too. “But the A-Z won’t be in until the day after tomorrow.”
“Two whole days? Till Thursday?”
Suddenly he lost his look of absorption and controlled care; he put his hand on her arm and said, “You must try not to think about it.”
She laughed, at him, at his suggestion, and said, “Oh, thank you, Dr. Jesskin.”
Try not to think about it indeed. She stopped at a drugstore counter for toast and coffee and thought, Thank God for Martha Litton, and glanced at her watch. She was to be at Miss Litton’s at eleven for the interview that had been so difficult to set up, now that Miss Litton’s third comedy, Time and a Half, was a greater smash than her first two, and though she never worked at deadline heat for these special pieces, she could plunge along on this one for the entire day, and into the evening. She often did her best work in the evening.
Don’t think about it. She walked to Miss Litton’s apartment quickly, and was again too early, and walked around the block several times before going up. From Miss Litton’s testy greeting—“I tried to reach you this morning but you were out. It’s turned into the worst sort of time for an interview”—she knew she was in for a difficult session. Thank God for that too.
She rarely took notes beyond particularities of spellings and dates, but today she did, using not a notebook but copy paper folded and propped against her purse. Twice in the first minutes she had to say, “Sorry, could you tell me that again?” and twice Miss Litton repeated what she had said, showing an impatience that it should be necessary.
It was all useless stuff, the official gabble of publicity releases, but Dori hid that estimate of it. At the first chance she said, “Could we go back before your first play? You were born in Philadelphia, I know—”
“Av ovo?” Miss Litton said primly, but began nevertheless to talk of her childhood, and for the first time Dori listened without bothering with her folded copy paper. Here it is, she thought, the only kind of thing that ever explains anybody, if you can ever get at it.
The interview went on for an hour and when Dori left she had the first paragraph of her piece clear in her mind. She would go straight to the typewriter and stay with it and not let herself think, and though she rather thoroughly disliked the current Martha Litton for her self-love and self-praise, she ought to be able to use that dislike judiciously and write something that had insight and some feeling.
“Anything by Dori Gray will have warmth,” her editor at the paper had once said in her presence, “sometimes enough to singe your eyebrows.”
It must be true; enough people had said so by now, enough letters had told her so. It wasn’t a trick; it must come through her effort always to see into, to look for character instead of characteristic. She was never facile and easy with a phrase anyhow; that was what had ruined her the one time she had tried out for a panel show on television, that and the fact that she had gone stiff with self-consciousness, what with the whole production staff and the other panelists, experienced charmers all, waiting hopefully for some clever little mot.
Yet the light turn of phrase came readily when she was with one congenial person. Dick Towson always laughed when they were together, and had even asked why she didn’t try writing light pieces or a humor column in some women’s magazine. He was the one with the light touch, really; perhaps that was why he brought it out in her when they were together. If he were here right now she would probably burst out with her news; she was always apt to tell things to anybody close to her, close in the special closeness that came only with making love over a long period of time. D. H. Lawrence had talked in Lady Chatterley of the deep peace that came from steady love-making, only he had used the word, the lovely thick Anglo-Saxon word which she liked and approved of in theory but could not easily say, despite the uninhibited language of 1967.
But Lawrence was right; there was a peacefulness and closeness from a continuing sexuality, if it was satisfying and solid for both, and she and Dick had known that closeness and knew it still, even though they also knew, each of them and without verbalizing it, that they were coming to the end. Paradox, paradox. She had never ended anything with hatred and blame, except after Tony, and she still felt warm toward Dick and linked with him.
Linked. A surge of feeling surprised her, for his share in what had happened—it has happened, the reports will say yes—a leap of grateful love, the best sort, for it asked nothing. Suddenly he seemed newly appealing; she remembered how exciting it had been, almost a year and a half ago, how flattering, that he should be demanding her time, her emotion, her body, when he could have chosen almost any younger or prettier girl. That first time they were in the apartment alone, she had said something about those possible other girls, and he had suddenly and roughly taken her hand and held it against himself and said, “But you’re the one does this,” and watched her as she felt the bulk of him rising to her palm, arrogant and sure.
They had gone to bed that night and it had been right and good and equal for them both, and there were none of the insufferable little coynesses and uncertainties and she had known she would see him whenever he was in New York and not off on an assignment. “Is it all right, about your family?” she had asked once, and she had shut her off, not brusquely, but with a decisiveness that removed all responsibility from her, and any need for guilt. “I’ve got a damn good marriage in all the usual twenty-five-years-of-it ways, steady, and no surprises, and all the kids know Dad’s a newspaperman who’s away half the time but won’t ever go for good, and nobody’s got any kick coming, so it’s okay all around and you and I don’t ever have to worry about it.”
They had never worried about it. At the beginning he would telephone her late at night when he was covering some story in London or Washington or Tel Aviv, but though he never labored the point, she knew that he also called his wife from those same places and that overseas phone calls were almost matter-of-fact to his four children.
At the beginning he would come straight to her from Kennedy Airport when he returned; for the past few months, though, he often went home instead and came to her the next day or perhaps the day after. It was one of the small signals of the passing of time, the passing of the first heat and press and gluttony of a new affair, and she saw it for what it was with a strange willingness, a wisdom she did not know she possessed but which she welcomed with a faint pleasure as if she were awarding herself the mildest of accolades for avoiding that most dreaded feminine failing, being too demanding.
Yet at this moment, if he were to phone and say he was just in from his assignment, impossible since he was off in that fierce part of the world, if he were by some fluke to phone and say, Towson here, I’m at Kennedy, can I come over?”—
She glanced at the telephone as if it actually had rung and suddenly rose from the typewriter. She hadn’t gone beyond the first paragraph of the piece on Martha Litton; she had let her mind wander, undisciplined and wanton, because the first major problem she would have when all the reports were in would be centered in Dick Towson and his right to know or her decent obligation not to let him know.
Suddenly another one of Dick’s pronouncements popped into her mind, this also spoken with that brusque decisiveness that lifted all responsibility from her. “Either of us can want out and all holds by the other barred—yes?” She had laughed at the adroitness and thought how exactly his mood had suited hers. As for this kind of hold, it was not only barred but unthinkable.
She began to prowl restlessly around the room. Anyway, she thought, I don’t have to decide now. He may be there for months. I’m going to take this just as it happens, one day at a time.
She went back to the typewriter and wrote hard for another paragraph and then once again pushed back from her desk and began to move about. It was a pretty room, her bedroom and study combined, a room she felt easy in when she was alone, and a little proud of when she was not alone.
Suddenly she wished she were not alone. Remembering that first night with Dick had made her remember how marvelous it was to be made love to, how normal and sweet and good she always felt. She wished she were newly in love, newly in bed, for the first time with somebody new, caught in that fresh wild passion of beginnings, where you could never stop to think of any future—
The wrong moment for ruling out futures, she thought wryly. Again she went to her typewriter; another paragraph spurted from the keys and then the telephone rang. It was a shrill loud bell which she had often resolved to ask the phone company to mute or diminish and the sound of it scarred her mood. She lifted the receiver and heard Matthew Poole say “Hello?” and her heart lifted too.
“I thought you were going to Boston,” she greeted him.
“I’m in Boston.”
“Calling me from Boston?”
He laughed. “Long distance—it’s a new invention.”
“I’ve heard.”
“I’m taking the five o’clock shuttle back,” he said, “and I wondered if you’d have dinner with me.”
“Tonight?”
“That’s why I’m using the new invention.”
“I’m not being too bright, am I?” She hesitated. “I was going to finish writing an interview I’m doing.”
“That sounds disciplined and worthwhile. Don’t be. Say you will have dinner with me.”
“I’d love to. I’m in no mood to be disciplined and worthwhile.”
“Good. Can I come by at about six thirty? And you tell me where to take you for dinner?”
“I’ll give you a drink while I decide.”
As she hung up she thought, I oughtn’t to. Until I know for sure, I ought not to see him even once more. Suppose he—but he won’t. He’s not the sudden lover like Dick. And if he is, I’m not. But my God, there I go. If it’s not hindsight-thinking, devious and destructive, it’s forward-projection, equally dangerous.
She moved toward her desk and boredom invaded her. Who cared about Martha Litton and her self-importance and vanity and mannerisms? There were days for working and days for restlessness and God knew this was a restless one. She went to the kitchen to ask Nellie to put out ice cubes and a few things to have with their drinks.
“I could stay on if you want,” Nellie offered in a dubious tone. She always sounded dubious, a rather surly Swedish girl who arrived daily at three and left at five except by special arrangement.
“Never mind, thanks. We’re going out.”
The kitchen window suddenly streaked across with rain and Dori was dismayed. The afternoon sky had gone purple-gray and wind was whistling around the corner of the building. His plane would be stormbound or detoured to Washington or Richmond and the whole thing would be off. The telephone would ring again and he would explain and ask if they could make it another time.
They could but it would be different. Right now was the time, right now when she should be saying no; this mood was the mood, this restlessness the yeast that was rising—all part of the wild impossible present, with those technicians off in an unknown laboratory, starting their tests to find an answer they didn’t care about one way or another.
She went back to her own room and stared out at the storm. The sky darkened further; streetlights came on and people raced along the edges of buildings, tenting sopping newspapers over their heads. She watched them minutely as if they were terribly important to her, as if they were her dearest friends suddenly attacked and hurrying toward her for safety. What made Matthew Poole so important, so suddenly important? Last night’s dinner and concert added little to what she actually knew about him, but he somehow had revealed himself more freely; there had been about him a pleased and contented air that compelled attention, as if he were not often happy. She hadn’t seen it except during the music, but now she realized that it had been there through all of the evening. He had taken her home and come up for a nightcap and talked again about the boy he was going to defend as a conscientious objector; he talked with the calm tone of a man who knew she agreed with him, and an inordinate pride had ballooned in her for the Spock piece that had told him so. And then, with no word of whether they were to see each other even once more, he had said good-night and left, without so much as an extra pressure of her hand.
Now this. She turned abruptly from the window and went to work. This time she wrote without pause, telling herself it was only first draft anyway and better than hanging around waiting for time to get itself spent. When she wrote this way, without pause or question, she slid the spacing lever to position 3, so that she was doing triple-spaced pages, and they flew by. Time enough to improve them tomorrow. Or, if the storm went furiously on, this evening, when there would be nothing else. A fine lonely evening in the home.
Finally she bathed and dressed, and thought the rain and wind had abated, and could not be sure, and then a bell rang and it was not the shrill telephone but the front door.
She opened it and stood aside, letting him pass by her into the square little hallway, each saying hello as if they were constrained.
“Was it a rough flight?”
“Not to speak of.”
“I thought—I always think everything is grounded if it rains. What can I give you for a drink?”
She started for the living room and he followed but he did not answer. At the small chest that served as a bar she turned to him questioningly. He was watching her with what looked like sternness; his mouth was drawn as if in disapproval, his eyebrows drawn as if in anger. Suddenly he put both his hands on her shoulders and said, “I cannot stop thinking of you,” and drew her toward him, his face seeking hers, but his mouth not. “It’s been years since anybody’s mattered this much.”
She heard her breath as it was sharply drawn inward at his words, felt the weaving churning move of passion rolling, and thought, But I mustn’t, not now, not now of all times. He turned his head to kiss her, and her breath sucked inward again and something wavered and fell within her and she was invaded all at once by the lovely helplessness of acquiescence.
Suddenly she pushed hard away from him, wheeling away, saying lightly, “Something to drink,” lightly, falsely, the social tone she hated in others. “Martini? Or Scotch on the?”
“Scotch, please.” He watched her put two cubes into a glass and then pour the Scotch, accepting the drink in silence when she offered it, waiting until she prepared one for herself. Then he said, without emphasis, “Why did you suddenly decide no?”
“I didn’t decide. I just had to not go on.”
“There was one moment when you suddenly stopped. Up to then you were as moved as I was.”
“I was,” she said, “oh, I was.”
He waited but she did not continue. She sat down on the sofa and in a moment he sat down too, well away from her. “Last night you said you were reasonably uninvolved,” he said finally. “Does it turn out you’re not as uninvolved as you thought?”
She shook her head in denial.
“But if that is it, I’ll wait around until you are.”
“It’s not being in love with somebody. It’s something else. I don’t think I can talk about it. For now anyway.”
“Then don’t. You needn’t ever.”
She turned quickly away and set her drink on the coffee table. Even his voice stirred her, the negation in it now. Just this once, she thought. Give in; don’t make up rules about what you should do, what you shouldn’t, when you should, when you shouldn’t. Without knowing she was going to she put her hand out behind her, reaching toward him. In another moment she was in his arms and there on the sofa, like two fumbling adolescents, they made love.
They stayed together for all of the next day, and through a second night, in the discovery and rediscovery of passion each felt was deeper and more meaningful than all the onetime passion of first youth. They talked, they told each other as much of autobiography and truth as they could tell, and they withheld far more than either knew, the censors at their lips unsuspected by either one.
“I’ll be more expansive about this someday,” Matthew said once when he was talking of his marriage and of his wife. “I’m difficult to live with, I guess.”
“Who isn’t?”
“Marriage is difficult, is what you’re saying.”
“It also has its good things.”
He nodded and seemed to be deciding what those were but he did not speak. They could sit silent and remain at ease; already they had discovered this about each other. The truncated form of their self-revelation was, they each understood, only for the present, for this newness which was still so enveloping that though they were not inhibited in seeking each other’s bodies, they still were restrained, as strangers might be restrained, from too ready an outpouring of revelation involving others.
It’s one difference between being a girl and being older, Dori thought in the middle of a silence after she had swiftly told him of the sudden ending of her life with Tony. When you’re older you summarize, you don’t lavish detail on every scene, even the huge ones; there’s been too much piled up by the time you’re forty. She could remember the readiness with which she would tell everything there was to tell about herself when she had gone out with her first dates, tell about herself as a girl at school, at college, tell of her first experiences with boys. When she met Tony, they had sat for hours in some booth or at some table in one of his favorite restaurants, each telling the other “everything” in the first generosities and trusts of new love, a new love that was going to last forever. Tony had been equally ready to tell everything about himself, details of his first dates, his first discovery of sleeping with a girl—a woman, twenty years older and kind and gentle, with a healthy attitude toward sex so that he was at his best with sex, never furtive, never ashamed, and had in turn doubtless trained her to be the same, brought her up to be the same, as it were, since he had been her first lover.
But now with Matthew, narrative was synopsized as she went along. It was almost as if she were gliding rapidly over most of her marriage to tell of its abrupt ending, and even that she told in a hurried way as if she were recapitulating something he already knew, as if she were fearful lest she sound the stereotypic whining woman, the hurt and injured woman she would hate to be, and hate to be thought to be.
She fell silent then, remembering its ending and the aftermath with disbelief that it could have been so terrible. Through month after month she had been a creature in the positive and cunning control of a thing stronger and more skillful than she, an almost animate savage that could spring at her, direct her thoughts, her sleep, her instincts. For all those months, twenty, thirty, nearly forty months, her own will could beat back that savage only when she was actually working; in the first minute after she whirled the last page out of her typewriter, the other took over, the boss other, the controlling other, reminding her not of pain but of the happy hours they had had before he had left her for Hazel, reminding her of sweet and good evenings, of lovemaking that had gratified each of them and both of them.
Twenty, thirty, nearly forty months, and then somehow she had realized that she was what people called “over it,” as if one ever were truly over one’s first great wound, as if the fading scar tissue were not permanently part of one, livid no longer but toughly existing forever.
Sex had begun to be possible again, not love but sex. Quite suddenly she had stayed overnight with a man who made fun of her refusal—“You’re afraid you might feel happy again”—and it had been a night of violent sexuality that she had violently responded to, suddenly restored to life and appetite.
She had seen the man a few times more, aware that for her it was loveless as it was for him, mindless, no memories or hopes or past or future, nothing but the throbbing wet wonderful rise and fall again and again.
Soon enough she had refused to see him and he had not believed that she meant it. “Why not? Who’s going to get sore at you?” Nobody, she had agreed, and admitted that she ought to make better use of her free status, but she had gone on refusing, sinking again into the old unwanted and arid continence.
Why didn’t she get married again, her friends had asked again and again. “You’re so attractive and you can’t really like living alone.”
Nobody had understood that either and she had had no easy explanation. Hidden within her, doubtless, was the real answer; she had assured herself that she could reach down, find it, uproot it if she tried hard enough, if she needed to enough. But later, when searching for answers would no longer cause upheaval all over again.
But as time passed, her private creed had become, Let it be, leave it, don’t, touch, fragile. And now suddenly with Matthew, now in these two days and nights those wise admonitions no longer were necessary.
Now with Matthew—as she thought it, she touched his hair and closed her eyes in deepening intensity—she was finding again for the first time in all the lost long years the indescribable interweaving of sexual love and romantic love, both threaded through now with the gigantic new perhaps which those impersonal technicians off in some aseptic laboratory had already put their official negative or positive to, in some report that was surely in the mails at this very moment.
“No, we never had children,” she had said in her swift account of her marriage. She did not say it airily as if it had never mattered but neither did she permit the tone or inflection of some major sadness that would flag his attention. Later, if it were pronounced true tomorrow by Dr. Jesskin, she would decide whether to tell him and how to tell him. Already she wanted him to know that she was no benighted barren woman; already she found herself wondering whether this might change her in his mind from the desirable unattached woman he thought her into a—into a what? A problem? A shock? An untouchable?
Just for now, she kept telling herself. Just this couple of beautiful days. During the first evening he had telephoned his house, talked to his daughter, and the clear young voice of Hildy had sounded out to her across the room. “Are you still in Boston, Dad?” He had answered only “I won’t be home until Thursday,” and they had talked of other things. Her own telephone calls had been as free of explicit falsehood because nobody existed to whom she need tell or explain or alibi or dissemble. And she had thought, in extenuation she had not dreamed she needed, Otherwise I’d never never get through until Thursday morning with Dr. Jesskin. Now if something is wrong Thursday morning, now I could bear it.
To be hit by two such beginnings at one time! Almost it seemed that fate had sent Matthew to her now as a shield against the wildness of disappointment that might await her in the morning. And equally it seemed that this same fate was slyly asking her whether now she would still be overjoyed if the reports said yes, you are pregnant.